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Walks: Descriptions
473 Bolton Abbey Description and Information | 473 Bolton Abbey Description and Information |
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| Written by the Wanderlust Team | ||||||
| Friday, 30 November 2007 | ||||||
![]() Get the Abbey habit Distance: Six and a half miles. General Location: The Yorkshire Dales. Start: Bolton Abbey. Right of Way: Public, permissive paths and open access. Dogs: Not legal. Map: Drawn from OS Explorer OL2 Yorkshire Dales southern and western areas, or OL 297 Lower Wharfedale. Date walked: Sunday 26 March 2006. Road Route: From York: via Harrogate or Otley. Car Parking: First carpark, on left at Bolton Abbey village, fee. Lavatories: At carpark and Pavilion. Refreshments: Kiosk at carpark, nearby teashop. Restaurant and tea inside and outside at Pavilion. Pub/Inn - The Devonshire Arms. Tourist & Public Transport Information: Tel: 01756 718009, www.boltonabbey.com. Terrain: Mainly moorland. Points of interest: Wheelchair route along river. Difficulty: Moderate in good weather. Please observe the Country Code and park sensibly. While every effort is made to provide accurate information, walkers set out at their own risk. Please click the image below to go to the walking route sketch map and detailed directions, or scroll down to a Google Map of the route, the route description, and an image gallery. Plus you can bookmark this page on your favourite social bookmarking site, and comment on the walk. We hope you enjoy the walk. GooglemapPlease click on "Map" to see a cartographic map view of the route and "Hybrid" to see the combined map and Satellite. Please use the zoom tools or drag the slider to move in close or to zoom out (or use mousewheel zoom). Use the pan tools to move the map vertically and horizontally or place your mouse over the map and it changes to a hand; click your mouse to "grab" the map to manually scroll the map in any direction. The two hikers icon shows the start of the route and clicking on it will show the route starting direction. Please note that the outline route is a guide only and on full or near full zoom cannot be guaranteed to follow every twist and turn of the route described. If you can’t see the walk on the Google Map, please refresh.
Bolton Abbey was springtime busy with walkers, cyclists, and general wanderers. The River Wharfe, charged with Dales rain, runs past the old abbey and draws the crowds, but this is not countryside-lite, the sunlight caught the moors and we climbed away to the quietness, hitting the heather after half an hour, after Back O’ Th’ Hill Farm and at about 750 feet. A large raptor flew high, from a photo I took I can with confidence say it was a red kite, they have a distinctive forked tail, a five and a half foot wingspan and apparently have taken a fancy to this estate which is only 20 miles as the kite flies from their original release point at Harewood House near Leeds. Curlews hung in the wind rippling out their songs until a pair of predators spooked them into aerobatics. By now there were cracking views down into Wharfedale, the throngs there diminished to bright dots, and the shape of our valley was clear and also the reflective shape of our route which loops it at a high level, at over one thousand feet. The ever lovely line of drystone wall separated the sheep pasture from the heather moor above and we moved through that heather, easily because all the way round is a comfortable stone/grass track, head up walking, super. Apart from the birds there was a sad sign of spring in a doomed gob of frogspawn in a shallow puddle. And on the subject of signs there are a number of old and lichen encrusted fingerposts pointing to ‘Access Area’ which is because this large expanse of moor has for more than thirty years been open access and well publicised, a success story that proves that walking and grouse shooting can happily co-exist, whether kites and gamekeepers can co-exist is to be seen. There's the valley beck to cross but that was only one step and there’s a waterfall by the ford, and then a little further on a grotto like shelter built into rock, a sandwich stop with an overview of the day’s territory with distant wind turbines at Chelker Reservoir, I like these both for reasons green and aesthetic, after all we all love ye-olde windmills and the modern versions are much more elegant. The track ran down another mile, and the Abbey was visible for about that distance, and then the last descent was through Bolton Park with old oaks and new lambs, to the Wharfe again. Perfectly placed, just across a bridge, is the Pavilion and here were hundreds of people, drinking, feeding and people watching, including two girls walking ferrets. Rain shifted us on, there's another mile to do, up and down the garlic woods above the river till the big empty lancet windows of the abbey were there again, a splendid walk. Image GalleryPlease click on the word "Pictures" to toggle the thumbnails on and off. Hover your mouse over the image to see the forward and back arrows to view the gallery. {smoothgallery folder=images/stories/473Bolton Abbey}
Powered by !JoomlaComment 3.12 Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved. |
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| Last Updated ( Sunday, 06 July 2008 ) | ||||||
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