Friday, 16 December 2022

New Boat - Back Afloat

 New Boat - Back Afloat 


Restarting the blog as we enter a new phase in our lives 

We are back afloat 

Purchase of a 58ft narrowboat currently called PIKE


keys to be collected this weekend and then the lists start on the work required to get it up to the standard we are happy with 

current thoughts are  - new exterior paint, new cover for the front well deck, new tunnel light, 



Wednesday, 7 September 2011

Pennine way - next stage

Background

Over the last 2 years I have been wlaking sections of the pennine way, in 2010 I walked from Edale to Malham on 6 day walks; in july 2010

I walked a section from Malham to Tan hill inn over 4 days; camping for 3 nights.

In 2011 I wasnt able to walk a section due to working away in Newcastle so didn have time to spare at the weekends.

so forward to 2012 and an oppurtunity arose to spend 2 days walking from Tan hill to Dufton, overnight at Middleton-in -Teesdale

 

6th March 2012 - Tuesday

Tan Hill Inn to Middleton in Teesdale - 15 miles

Very cold overnight and temperature was -4 degrees C as we turned off the M6 at tebay, and a barmy -2 degrees C as we pulled up outside Tan Hill Inn, though the bonus was the sky was clear and blue and unilike last time i was here when it was raining heavily back in 2010 I could see all the way across Sleightome moor to the traffic on the A66 and beyond.

the landlady of the Inn came out with her spaniel and said hello, I would meet her again later.

Donned my boots and rucsac, said good bye to Mrs B and cassiedog, who was staying at home, due to age and athritis, and with Mollydog ( the border terrier) I headed down to the stile and crossed it and onto the moor.

The first section of the day is 5 miles across Sleighthome moor to the A66 dual carriageway. the first 3 miles of this is very boggy moor, and it doesn't have the slabs that the south pennine moors have over Kinder and Blackstone edge and others. After reading Wainwrights description, Iwas sort of looking forward to this and I wasnt as well, looking forward as this would be a taste of what the original PW was across Kinder and featherbed moss, not, as i was carrying a full pack for the second time for 18 months and had a long way to go.

But my fears were relatively unfounded as the low temperatures meant that the moor was frozen and supported my weight well, only lost my foot a couple of times when i passed through the frozen crust, but with the help of the walking pole and my momentum I managed to keep going quite easily.

after 3/4 mile the pub dog turned up beside us and went ranging away ahead of us across the moor and wouldnt come close enough for me to catch her, this went on as we joined the shallow valley of the sleightholme beck and the ground improved, Took my fiorst rest at 2 miles and manged to get a phone signal and rang the Tan hill Inn to tell them that I had their dog, ... " Middleton or Keld?" was the response, it turns out the dog regularly escapes and takes it self off for a walk with hikers leaving the pub. I arranged to meet the landlady at the green access brdige across the beck and she turned up as i arrived there in a dscovery and bundled the dog into the back, and explained that in the past she has collected the dog from Middleton, Bowes and Hawes. watched them drive off then follwoed them along the track and into some farmland.

The first farm was in a hollow, but was deserted, looked like the sheds hadnt been used for a few years but there were signs of habitation and washing in the farmhouse. 200yards on the road and then back off into the fields, lots of geese, ducks and oystercatchers roosting in the fields either side and then over a bridge over the Beck, evidence that when in spate the stream floods these fields as the debris caught in the barbed wire fence evidenced.

a short shrp climb brought us back up to the level of the moor, but we followed the valley a little further before the Bowes loop diversion left and we turned left and struck off across the moor towards God's bridge and the A66.

the morning sun had got some heat in it and the earlier frost and ice had melted and this section was more boggy and difficult but soon through it and downhill into the fields and arrived at God's Bridge, Sat down and had a cup of coffee and had a rest whilst enjoying the scenery, before moving on.

God's bridge is a natural limestone bridge over the river Greta, well only over the river when it is flowing as the river passes underground through the limestone here and the bridge is usually dry or just have pols of water.

After the break a short climb up the track and through the underpass under the A66 that was a noisy intrusion. then back out onto the moor and away, even from here I could see Tan hill inn in the distance.

The next section is undulating moorland on a narrow path through the heather, lts of Grouse and skylarks and the odd Curlew about, view opened out and i coiuld see the next drop and climb through the great brook past a shooting hut that looked more like a scout hut.

up again and ove the next rise and the view ipened out to reveal a reservoir and a further ridge and the hills beyond, was this the first or second valley with reservoirs I could see, it was soon apparent that it was the first and I could then spy a lot of my route across the further valleys.

Down to meet a track and through a farmyard then down again to the reservoir and the Bowes loop rejoined. on the banks of the reservoir was the first cache of the trip, so Rucsack off and tied mopllydog to the rucksack as there were sheep nearby and searched for the cache, quickly found and swapped travel bugs and then sat by the path and had my lunch, and make some notes in the wainwright guide,

Metrolink

Well after a month in Oxford working on the new Mathematical Institute I have been transferred back to Manchester and back onto the Metrolink job.

last time i was here i was on the South Manchester line through Chorlton, this is now open and on tuesday morning i had a wander down to see what the completed tram line looked like.

some before and after pics below:

This is the cycleway path as the line was constructed

 


and this is the same shot now

 

 

and a shot from the st werberghs road overbridge overlooking the new island stop


 

This time i am on the Airport line, this winds from Stwerberghs stop across the mersey, the M60, through northern moor and wythenshawe, to the airport.

Sunday, 7 August 2011

FTF shark

Got a FTF today, o ancache in huddersfield, a puzzle cache too. based on Pi. in fact it was called Pi.
Solved the puzzle and dashed uphil to find the nano.

Thursday, 4 August 2011

long journey south

Left Newcastle at 12.10 heading south, Home by 2.20, to see C then away again back across to the M1 at 6.20pm heading to Oxford and another Premier Inn.
I lengthened the journey with 3 caches by motorway junctions 31,30 and 29 but it was taking too long so gave up the caching and got on with the drive.
just made it through Catthorpe interchange as they were shutting the motorway at 8.30pm , a quick coffe stop at Northhampton saw me in the hotel for 10pm. so thats 295 miles driven for the day, glad i dont have to do that too often.

Last Caches in Newcastle

Out after work to grab the last few caches in newcatle and gateshead centre


Started out with GC1052Y Pebble Mosaic Phoenix on the Gateshead side of the Tyne, only a micro, but I had DNF’d it back in October when I first came to Newcastle for work but it was missing at the time, so now on my last night up here thought I would return find the cache and look out over the Tyne. This time it was an obvious find, took longer to unroll and sign the log. The tide was in and the river was full, a small boat was heading upstream, I could have stood and watched the river for the rest of the evening but No, move on grab a few more before retiring to the hotel.


2nd on the list was gc2vjb9 Threshold this was a work of ‘art’ on the edge of Gateshead town centre, Some of the previous logs had voiced an opinion that it was a waste of money, but I don’t think so. I stood whilst signing the log and waiting for people to move on and listened to a piece about a fire and stampede at a Gateshead Theatre at the turn of the 20th Century.
I think the public art is brilliant and different.


3rd was a micro at Gateshead Stadium Metro station GCWR37. A tricky hide on the bridge over the railway made a lot harder by the number of people most in Newcastle football shirts coming off the metrotrains and off the station past me heading for something going on at the Gateshead stadium.
I managed to search in between the trains and found the cache, then once I’d signed the log 2 trains arrived and I had to wait for another 5 mins to replace it. Hopefully I just looked like I was waiting for someonhttp://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gife as I loitered on the bridge.


After that it was back across the Tyne and to the hotel, dropped off the car and bags in the room and headed out to grab 2 more close by caches again onhttp://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gifes that I had DNF’d before.


The 4th cache was There is nothing like a Dame , a nano on ornate black railings, which this time I found quickly then through Northumbria University to the bridge and the 5th cache, university challenge, over the motorway and as I had been told where this was I soon had that in hand too, then back to the hotel for dinner and bed,


An enjoyable trip out and 5 successful finds which is rare for me on urban nanos.



as a post script: the cachers i had met during my time up in newcastle, I had emailed them to say i was finished and leaving on the friday, but i didnt finish and had to return, one of them Northunbria biker must be geostalking me as he noticed my name on the logs of the caches above and emailed me as to why i was still up in newcastle.

Tuesday, 2 August 2011

update

Been nearly a year since I blogged
So quick update:
Work: finished at Urenco in October as the contract was postponed; so I was transferred to Newcastle Royal Victoria Infirmary to work on a contract to build two 8 storey office block.
Now in August this has neared completion, so will soon be on my way.
Initially to Oxford to work on the Maths institute bulding at oxford University for 4-5 weeks and then back up to Manchester to work on the Airport line of the Metrolnk and back to sleeping in my own bed.

House, work on house has been suspended as I was living away in the week up in Newcastle and couldn’t get going on the redecoration, but must start it.
The garden is looking really good this year, and C and I are getting our heads round things we can attempt.
I bought some roses from Fryers that were on offer and 3 out of the 5 bought have grown and produced lovely flowers, and the harsh pruning the C did in the winter have turned the pink rose bushes in the front garden into giants and they smell lovely.

Caching: Being up in n ewcastle has been great for caching as I had nothing else to do in the evenings so I went out and about finding caches all over County Durham usually getting 5 or 6 a night, the consequence of this is that my numbers have shot up, and in the 6months from Jan to June I had done more caches than I had done in a full year in both 2010 and 2009, over 650 caches found!!. ( but its not about the numbers) I have seen some great things along the Tyne river, plenty of deer in woods in the evenings, red Kites, Salmon jumping the weir at Hexham, to name a few that come straight to mind, too many to list in this recap .

So here’s looking forward to a new area to cache in round oxford, then at last after a year working away, to be back home every night and getting reinvolved in the Pennine model railway society