Tuesday, 30 August 2011

Red Squirrels


Hello Peeps!
Here we have a section of the squirrel population of a certain location in Scotland....


Nuts on the ground

Nuts upside down

Baby squirrel is a bit out of it....

But Blondy is tucking in

Upstairs and downstairs

How many can you see. There are 4 but the one in the grass at the back is hardly a blurr.

Safe dining in the trees.

look, no hands

tasty....

Careful Cyril

Aren't I pretty?

Me Too!

There are about 6-8 in this group. Hope they all last through the winter....
end of post

Friday, 26 August 2011

Cheddar Gorge Circular walk

Ok, so this is a walk of about 9 miles around Cheddar Gorge. It is relatively easy walking, but with a few short steep pulls up and drops down at the ends of the Gorge. It is a bit muddy in places but it has been quite rainy recently and that might explain it. A head for heights will get you close to the steep drops, otherwise keep to the paths and no vertigo.
You will probably meet a few other people but no real crowds.



We have had previously Middle Bottom, Far Bottom and Scratchy Bottom. Here I give you Velvet Bottom.
Park the car on one of the old dams and set off downhill.

My favourite flower. Campanula.....Harebells.  Loads of them in swathes.

Walking down Velvet Bottom is a trip in time. This was a highly industrialised landscape until recent years. Lead mining....can you think of a more toxic environment?

Black Rock is now subject of elfansafety barriers. Rocks fall off cliffs don't you know.

There is even a limekiln....

But climbing up over the western side of the Gorge the views open up. The path to this point was the muddiest section.

The meadows are full of flowers of all descriptions.

That's where we are heading, but we have some distance to go. The Gorge falls 100m between.

Limestone cliffs of the western side. I could hear the call of the peregrine falcons and buzzards that nest here...didn't see them.

Looking SW to Brent Knoll and the Bristol Channel

And East to the famous Glastonbury Tor.

Magical woods on the descent to Cheddar Village.

To the Gardeners Arms for lunch....Ha!

Steak salad and a pint of the local real ale (Butcombe Bitter). Lovely.

We can sneer in smugness at the 'toorists' in the commercial hotspots of Cheddar Gorge theme park. We dive through there quickly so they don't notice.

Sheep that eat trees...

Rocks that we walked over an hour ago.

A million years ago I used to do this sort of thing. Click the pic to see the climbers. It is quite popular in the Gorge.

The east side of the Gorge is quite stunning

Returning up Velvet Bottom the slag banks are evident. The slag is still a bit contaminated and plants don't grow on it much.

Further up the ground shows its mining history. All the lumps and bumps going back to Roman times and beyond. The fence surrounds a mine shaft.

But some of the best views of Cheddar Gorge are from the road that runs through. Drop the ragtop and trundle down the twisty road, look up, ooh ahh!

To get a decent shot of the rocks you have to stop and climb one of the banks on the west cliffs. The sun has to be just right...in the evening. So far there has been no sun, bummer!
End of post

Saturday, 20 August 2011

Mendip Meanderings to Ebbor Gorge

This is a walk, a gentle wander through typical Somerset countryside from my base in Wells. The walk starts from the Market Square in Wells and returns finally some hours later.
Distance: 7 miles, gentle walking. There are a few hills but not much to worry about.
Map here:
http://www.getamap.ordnancesurveyleisure.co.uk/?key=MdshiAeY3YWBaV8WvHA3yg2


The Wednesday market is in full swing. Wednesday is mainly farm produce day but with a whole range of cakes, breads and other foodstuffs.

Start by crossing Cathedral Green past the west front. It is one of the most beautiful places in England, and the water wells up from the ground in the precincts of the Cathedral  and Palace grounds. 


The archway to Vicar's Choral, been there for 700 years. 20 times longer than we have lived in our present house in Wells...

The oldest street in Europe has wheelie bin problems 

Dive out of the ally at the end

Past the Liberty..

and up College Road and into the secret world via the black gates...

The Combe! A hidden gem!

Yew trees over the arch...


The quiet and peaceful orchard.....with the famous Mendip Mast!

Thatch cottages with traditional pink rendering

Milton, a small hamlet above Wells.

I am checking out the sloes for later! Sloe Gin Ha!

Typical Somerset country on a warm sunny day. This is the view over Model Farm.

There has been abundant flowers in the hedges, but I don't know what these are.

Yup,  Blackberries

Looking back at Sedgemoore and Glastonbury Tor

Ebbor Gorge is quite overgrown now 

Wow, natural sculptures.

The tight bit in Ebbor Gorge, always damp and muddy!