History Walk: Sat 13th Sept

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  • #24583
    Stephen Warwick
    Participant

    Meet at the car park in Over Haddon (GR:203 665) for a 10:00am start. The walk will take in parts of the Stone Age landscape around Lathkill Dale as well as some more recent relics of the lead mining industry. Approx 7-8 miles. Please let me know if you plan to come along.
    Cheers
    Steve W

    #24626
    Stephen Warwick
    Participant

    A little more information about this walk
    The car park in Over Haddon charges £2 for the day, payment by cash or by app (I think it’s called PaytoPark)
    Re dogs – just be aware that, having checked the route out on Friday, there are quite a lot of cattle in some of the fields we will cross and there are a few high stone stiles too. I’m happy if owners are.
    Forecast looks showery, please confirm by Thursday evening if you are joining me
    Cheers
    Steve W

    #24639
    Stephen Warwick
    Participant

    Meet report:
    Ten of us met in Over Haddon for a 7.5 mile walk above and then through Lathkill Dale. Walking westwards along the lane out of the village we admired a landscape which, minus the drystone walls and scattered farmsteads, is very similar to that which was experienced by the earliest humans to reach this area at the end of the Ice Age some 12 000 years ago. As the ice retreated, these Mesolithic hunter gatherers were able to follow and hunt migrating herds of reindeer, aurochs and wild horses and would have encountered mammoths, woolly rhinos and hyenas along the way. It was hard to imagine all this as we passed placid herds of grazing cows but a chilly wind helped to put us in the picture!
    We passed the jumbled remains of Ringham Low, once a five-chambered burial mound from the Neolithic period, and then made our way down through Ricklow Dale and its quarry to the shelter of Lathkill Dale. We visited the sites of Mesolithic rock shelters at Lathkill Head Cave and Cales Dale before moving into the woodland of the lower valley. Here the focus switched to the 18th & 19th century remnants of the lead mining industry and water-powered corn mills. We explored the ruins of Bateman’s House and Mandale Mine’s engine house but a new fence and rank vegetation prevented us from visiting the outlet of Mandale Sough – but we could at least hear the sound of the only running water we encountered all day. We finished with the steep climb back to the village.
    We were lucky with the weather, just one brief but heavy downpour, and the day was rounded off with Helen distributing pieces of delicious, home-made, apple bake – very tasty.
    Thanks for your company everyone
    Steve W

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