Monday, 26 June 2017

Forest of Dean Sculpture Trail

The weather has finally cooled enough to get Bonnie out and about exploring. Over the weekend we went to the Forest Of Dean Sculpture Trail. Not just some exercise for Bonnie, but some culture too. The route is too complicated to explain, but route maps can be bought for £1 at the Forestry Commission cafe at Beechenhurst Lodge. The trail itself is about 5 miles long, allowing for finding the sculptures and walking around them. Bonnie had a great time exploring, even bumping into wildlife in the form of deer and an unknown beast  we suspect was a bore hidden in the bushes.

The paths around the trail are well maintained and signposted.







Wednesday, 21 June 2017

Penallt and Millstone Country - 18th June

Having been frustrated recently with my lack of walking, be it through lack of time or lack of motivation, I finally got my rotund self moving on the hottest day of the year. It was too hot for Bonnie so she sat this one out at home. I picked this walk out of my latest version of the Wye Valley and Forest of Dean Pathfinder guide. If anyone has got it, this was route 4. 4 1/2 miles in distance.

I decided to pack light. Phone, book and camelbak.

The walk starts at the pay and display car park in Redbrook. Parking is £1.60 all day at time of writing. Setting off from the car park in the direction of the sports field (south) and heading for The Boat pub. (Yes, that's right, a walk that starts with heading for a pub!) Searching out and finding the footbridge across the River Wye to the pub, I was treated to the most beautiful views up and down the Wye Valley. The bridge sits about 15 metres above river level and once carried the Wye Valley rail line between Chepstow and Monmouth before closing in 1964.





After crossing the bridge, turn right and pass in front of The Boat pub. On nice weather days the pub can heave, with customers sat all along the river bank enjoying refreshments. Continue walking along the road until you reach a gate slightly off to the right and signposted to Monmouth. Go through and walk through meadow after meadow alongside the River Wye. In summer the vegetation can be very overgrown so trousers are recommended (I got stung and bitten a few times). Eventually, you'll enter Washing's Wood. Keep a look out for a signposted path on the left, heading uphill. Take the path uphill, turning right at the next 2 junctions. This will bring you onto a narrow tarmac lane, still continuing uphill, but more steeply. Near the top as the gradient starts to level, you'll reach The Old Church at Penallt on the right. Small, peaceful and scenic.



With your back to the church, set off straight ahead and slightly uphill. Shortly after, you pass Church Hill Common, opposite which are some stunning views across the Wye Valley to Gloucestershire. As the road bends round to the right, on the left you will find the Cross Dermond Coffin Stone. Coffins were set upon this to allow pall bearers a rest on the way to church for burial.





From the Coffin Stone, continue along the tarmac lane until you pass a turning on the left. Continue straight on and shortly after take a stile on the left into a small wood. Follow the woodland path to another stile set in a stone wall. Cross this and head straight across the small enclosure towards a gate. Turn right in front of the gate (there's a yellow footpath sign high up in one of the trees) and head along the enclosure perimeter to another stile that crosses onto a tarmac lane.


Turning left along the lane pass a newly constructed house on the left before taking a bridleway on the right signed to Pen Y Garn and Pen-twyn.


Continue along this, looking out for a stile on the left that leads into a field. Continue across the field keeping the hedged boundary on your left and proceed through a gap into the next field. Continue across this as before, keeping the boundary on your left to cross a stile into a hedged path. Follow this onto open heathland, heading towards a property on the right. The lane heads behind this property on the right to cross a stile onto a tarmac lane. 

Turn immediately left, then right at the junction, then left down a lane towards The Inn at Penallt . A lovely village pub that serves excellent food.


Looking towards the pub car park entrance, take a grass track off to the right passing to the right of Pen-twyn cottage.


Follow this to meet another tarmac lane and turn left, heading down hill for 3/4 of a mile. Keep a look out on the right for a new allotment slightly uphill from an old barn building with a totem pole (yes a totem pole). Mid distance along the lane between the allotment and house is a gravel track signposted to the River Wye. Take this and follow it down beside a wood store and through a gate leading to a stepped, down hill path. At the bottom you have 2 options. Either proceed straight ahead through a gate to the river bank, and turn left following the path back to The Boat or you can turn immediately left  and follow the old railway track bed back to The Boat. Both meet at the same place, the only difference being view and terrain. On this occasion I took the riverside view.





Once back at The Boat, you just cross the footbridge back to the car park. An enjoyable and mildy challenging walk, but with some outstanding scenic views and 2 cracking country pubs.


Monday, 5 June 2017

Bonnie needs some miles

With the challenge walks now out of the way, I'll be aiming to get young Bonnie out and about, exploring the Welsh countryside. The little monkey, adorable as she is, has a disgusting appetitite for animal muck. Rabbit, cow, sheep, you name it, she's probably munched on it.

While I have some ideas on where to take her,  I am open to suggestions from other dog owners as to where the good walks with dogs are, so please do get in touch.

Progress update - It's been too long!!

So, it has been a good few months since my last update, which is really very slack of me.

On Saturday 13th May I undertook, and completed, the Big Black Mountains Challenge (BBMC) Route B. This route was 32km in distance and consisted of 2 steep climbs and 2 long ridge walks, which was simple enough for navigating.

Arriving on the day, the sky was overcast, but it wasn't cold. Soon after starting the course during the first climb, the rain started. Light and drizzly to start with, gradually getting heavier the higher I got. At the top of the first climb the wind strength was immense. To make things worse, it was blowing across the first ridge. That 10 mile stretch was awful, driving rain being blown at force into me, was similar to hail.


Thankfully the rain broke at the end of the first ridge for about 30 minutes, before promptly letting rip again on the descent from Lord Hereford's Knob (yes, there really is a hill by that name!). This time it was a short shower and had pretty much dissipated by the time I started the climb up Hay Bluff.


Reaching the top of Hay Bluff and then heading South, the weather improved all the time. The wind died, the skies cleared and Llanthony Priory was bathed in sunshine by the time I returned to the start 7 hours after starting. My feet had blistered (I really do need some new boots), but I felt good. I scoffed no end of cake in the tent at the end.