Darley, Willey and Deancorner

After a bright but overcast morning, the clouds have lifted. Blue sky! It’s against the law to stay indoors on afternoons like this. Just for a change, I’ll leave the car at home, and head for Willey (rhymes with ‘silly’), via Darley (rhymes with ‘rarely’). I’ll return past Deancorner, which sounds (a) like it should and (b) like war has broken out. It’s the shoot, and it’s very noisy (both guns and beaters). I’ll take that feather out of my cap (metaphorically, but we don’t want any mistakes) and scuttle away quickly!

View OS map on Streetmap http://www.streetmap.co.uk/map.srf?X=367695&Y=300145&A=Y&Z=120

Willey: November noon

Should have been ‘November Morning’… We weren’t very quick getting away – until we saw the sunshine and the forecast for rain later. The season has moved on again – the trees are becoming rather sparsely foliated, and the autumnal fruits are either gone or well past their best – but it’s pleasant out, despite a few spots of rain. We’ll be ready for lunch when we get home

View OS map on Streetmap http://www.streetmap.co.uk/map?X=367515&Y=298310&A=Y&Z=120

Toadstools and pumpkins

It’s half term, it’s almost Halloween, and it’s very busy at Attingham – more cars than we’ve seen for a long time. “They won’t be going far…”
They aren’t – once we’re beyond the house, there are relatively few others around. The toadstools in the woods are past their sell-by dates, but there’s a wonderful assortment of pumpkins on display in the stable yard. (We’ve avoided the walled garden – we think that must be where all the others are)

Attingham Park NT

View OS map on Streetmap http://www.streetmap.co.uk/map?X=354940&Y=310040&A=Y&Z=120

Lunch in New Brighton

Tuesday 28 October: Long way to go for a bacon bap… Not something I’d eat very often – but I have to say, it was very good. We’re out and about, exploring on a ‘Cheshire Day Ranger’ ticket. Unsure of our plans when we boarded our first train, we ended up at New Brighton, on that sandy coast facing out into the Irish Sea from the Wirral peninsula. Bright sunshine, stiff breeze, high tide with lots of waves. A bit like Skegness – ‘it’s so bracing’. Most enjoyable!
View (some of) the rail photos: New Brighton on Geoff’s Rail Diaries
Cheshire Day Ranger with map

View OS map on Streetmap http://www.streetmap.co.uk/map?X=330752&Y=394201&A=Y&Z=120

Comer autumn

The season continues! The leaves are falling steadily now – soon the trees will be bare, and we’ll be well on the way to winter. There will still be plenty of fungi, I imagine, though not the ones we’ve met today – they’ll be long gone! Their above-ground lives are mostly short. The colours of the leaves and the variety of toadstools have certainly brightened up this cold afternoon in Comer Woods

Comer Woods NT

View OS map on Streetmap http://www.streetmap.co.uk/map?X=374740&Y=290067&A=Y&Z=120

An autumn morning: Shirlett

It’s cold, too. The clocks have gone back to GMT (or winter time, in effect) – is it anything to do with that? It’s a good morning to be out though, whatever time it really is, especially as rain is likely later. Plenty of seasonal colour, and some splendid toadstools – an enjoyable little outing.

View OS map on Streetmap http://www.streetmap.co.uk/map?X=365790&Y=298180&A=Y&Z=120

Homeward bound

Sunday 19 October: It rained. All day! We need to go to Portree, where I’m surplus to requirements. Coffee and cake (and a chapter from a book) in what used to be Aros will help to pass the time.

Monday 20 June: To Inverness – to return the hire car and board the train. It’s still raining on Skye, but the sun is out on the mainland and it’s a much better day. We need to grab a lunchtime bite, but nothing’s open along the Achnashellach – Achnasheen – Contin road. We’ll try Strathpeffer. There’s a cafe at the old railway station, but it’s closed too. However, the deli in the square serves us some delicious plum tart.
When the Kyle line was built (opening to Strome Ferry in 1870), the people of Strathpeffer didn’t want a railway, and the line had to take a difficult alternative route – a steep incline which caused the operators much trouble for many years. Meanwhile, Strathpeffer changed its mind, and in 1875 a short branch line opened, provided with the attractive station building which remains today. Strathpeffer would undoubtedly be a major contributor to local rail traffic if the Kyle line had taken that route. Sadly there wasn’t enough traffic to justify a separate branch line. It closed in 1946.

Post-oil: Cromarty: There’s time to kill before returning the car. Let’s drive around the Black Isle (it isn’t, though we cross bridges to enter and leave it!) to Cromarty. There’s an attractive little harbour there, in the throes of restoration/renovation. The Cromarty Firth is an eye-opener  – it appears to be an elephants’ graveyard for redundant oil rigs. The air is clear and the sunshine strong – until it slips behind shower clouds. We’d better be on our way now.
The Black Isle Bar’s pizzas are excellent: the beer’s pretty good too. We’ll need little else before our train arrives at Crewe (5.30 this morning, and already it feels like yesterday!). We’re home.