Walking in the South Pennines

 
There are over 128 walks described in this guide to the moorland areas between the Yorkshire Dales and the Peak District. An area of remarkably varied and contrasting landscapes of hills and mills. Covers Ilkley and Airedale, Pendle, Calderdale, Rossendale, Saddleworth and the area between Huddersfield and Holmfirth. For both experienced and novice walkers.
 

Walking in the South Pennines

Cover
Paperback - Laminated
Edition
First
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ISBN_13
9781852840419
Availability
Published

Price

£10.99

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Seasons
Year-round walking possibilities.
Centres
Heptonstall, Todmorden, Hebden Bridge, Haworth, Holme Chapel. The area is within easy reach of Manchester, Huddersfield, Leeds, Bradford, Sheffield and Halifax.
Difficulty
Selection suitable for most walking abilities.
Must See
Hebden Bridge, Hardcastle Crags, the ancient packhorse bridge at Wycoller... whichever you choose, you will be delighted.
 
 

Overshadowed by the Yorkshire Dales to the north and the Peak District to the south, the moors and valleys of the south Pennines have suffered undue neglect. Yet this is an area of stark beauty, rich in history and literature, and fine walking country.

Gladys Sellers, one of the best known guidebook writers in the north, has compiled a guide which includes every aspect of this fascinating countryside. There are over 128 walks to delight the connoisseur.

The south Pennine landscape is one of hills and mills, sometimes more mills than hills. Both are interwoven in a mesh that is the very essence of this landscape, unique in the British Isles. Its strength lies in the contrast between the mill towns (though no longer satanic and under a pall of smoke) and their surrounding green valleys, where many an ancient hamlet lies, seamed by deep-cut wooded cloughs and topped by the ever present moors. Its lack of stately homes and parklands is off-set by the many fine yeoman farmers' and clothiers' houses, and often enough by the very mills themselves. Some of them are old enough to seem picturesque and many have real architectural merit. This fascinating landscape, fashioned more by the hand of man than nature, has evolved over the last seven or eight centuries from the hunting forest of the Norman barons - the rise and fall of the textile industry just set the final stamp upon it. It offers a vast amount of varied and interesting walking to the moderate walker.

 
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