Showing posts with label Stone Ramblers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Stone Ramblers. Show all posts

Monday, 14 October 2013

Walking in Italy near lake Iseo

Sale Marasino

I went with Stone Ramblers on a Ramblers Worldwide holiday to Italy September 8-22, 2013, staying at the Hotel Rotelli in Sale Marasino beside lake Iseo.   

It was excellent – ottimo!

There was a choice of walks each day, details of the walks I went on are as follows:




Pisogne

Over the two weeks I walked a total of 131.5km (81.7 miles), including considerable hills, a total ascent of 7.3km and descent of 9.4km, excluding the two 'days off'.

On the first day of the holiday we went to Monte Isola, the biggest lake island in Europe, in lake Iseo.  The walk on the second day included Pisogne, a very nice town with the nicest ice cream. 



Corna Trentapassi

On the third day we went to the top of a hill called Corna Trentapassi, crosses are often hill to be found on the top of the hills. 
Alps from Corna Trentapassi

There was a good view from there towards the Alps.








Ancient rock engravings, CapodiPonte

For the days off there were suggested trips to local attractions. On the first day off I went by train to Capo di Ponte where there are some ancient rock engravings. These aren't too clear until you 'tune into' them but when you do it's very interesting, there was a good little museum.
Capo di Ponte





There were lovely mountain views in Capo di Ponte.

River Oglio





The river Oglio which feeds lake Iseo was also a good sight. 






The train fares in Italy seem to be a good deal more logical than in Britain, they seem to be calculated according to distance and don't appear to depend on time of day. Single fares as far as I could gather were half a return fare and the price is the same if bought on the train. British train fares are by comparison a complete nightmare to fathom.   
 
Monte Isola from Punta Almana

                                                             
On the first day after the day off we scaled the highest hill of the holiday, Punta Almana. From there is one of the few views of the island Monte Isola where you can see water all round it.
                             
The second day we walked from Lovere. The church bells in all the towns visited played very pretty tunes I thought. This one in Lovere is an example:




The third day was a rural walk near Portele.
Isle di Loreto

The fourth day we climbed a small hill from which there is a good view of the little Isle di Loreto. 











Earth erosion pyramids

Then we visited the most interesting thing I saw during the holiday; earth erosion pyramids where glaciers have brought down moraine rock debris in the past and deposited it. Some is fine grained sand and some is big boulders. Then the rain gradually washes the sand away leaving boulders sheltering huge columns. 












Mont Blanc from Ponte del Orto

On the fifth day we went to Ponte del Orto which isn't especially high but weather conditions were spectacular. We got a very good view of Mont Blanc which apparently you can't usually see because it's so far away and obscured by heat haze.   









Monte Agolo

On the sixth day we went up Monte Agolo

On the second day off I visited the city of Brescia, which has a large castle and also some interesting Roman remains, with a bit of Celtic influence too.








By the penultimate full day of the holiday the weather had turned and we were in cloud on the top of Monte BronzoneWhen you get to the top of Monte Bronzone you ring the big bell, so I did:















On the last day I walked we went up Monte Rondondone.

On the day of our return journey I opted out of the short walk so I could pack at leisure and lounge around by the pool before going to a nearby restaurant for a large and very enjoyable lunch including a large range of meats, cheeses, anchovies, olives and some particularly good pumpkin pancakes, before returning home.

For me going away for two weeks was brilliant. For the first 4-5 days I just wanted more of it, by a week I was glad I wasn't with the group going home then as I was in the swing of things, after about 10-12 days I was starting to flag, the muscles ached a bit and I had a small blister. I enjoyed the remainder of the holiday but felt somewhat glad at the idea of a rest from walking after the 2 weeks.

A most essential item I took to Italy was insect repellent, which I had to smother myself with every day. This seems to vary from person to person, unfortunately I'm very tasty.

The things I liked least about Italy were the practice of caging wild birds such as blackbirds and song thrushes to lure others in to be shot and also the abundance of continuously barking dogs. The things I liked most other than the walking, views and delightful company were the very tuneful church bells, the bells on the cows and sheep and the many flavours of delicious ice cream.





Tuesday, 14 May 2013

Stafford Borough Walking Festival

Last week Stafford Borough Council held a walking festival, Sunday 5/5/13 to Saturday 11/5/13.  If this was to encourage people to walk it was preaching to the converted in my case as I am a keen walker anyway, but I took it as an opportunity to add variety to my walks and discover new information and places.  There was a good deal of choice of walks.

Sunday

I didn't do a festival walk on Sunday as I was keen to go on a 9 mile walk in the Youlgreave area of Derbyshire with Stone Ramblers instead.  Very good it was too.

Monday

I visited Sugnall Hall for the Bluebells and Blossom walk on a very warm and sunny bank holiday!  This was of interest as I did not know about the place previously.  There was a certain lack of organisation with this event, discrepancies in the tour times, no map provided and very little available for lunch compared with the published menu.  That was somewhat of a missed opportunity for them I thought, on a bank holiday especially.  I would have had my main meal there if the roasted pepper panini or quiche had been available. As it was the pineapple and grapefruit green tea and slice of coffee cake was very nice but not a very balanced diet.  The map situation was rectified after the event as the owner emailed one to me.


The tour itself was however very good and interesting, the bluebells were coming out in the woods although had not reached their prime due to the cold weather this spring.  I was also encouraged to appreciate the beauty of a little yellow flower called celandine, even though it is marauding rampantly all over my own garden.   We passed the kitchen block of the old hall, although the rest no longer exists.  The original Jacobean building had been demolished and a Georgian one built in its place.  That in turn had been demolished to build, as it turned out, nothing, because the money had run out!  The walled kitchen garden was very interesting, we were shown the items being grown, which included a large variety of young apple and pear trees.  The walls of the garden are impressive, built of ~250,000 bricks and hundreds of years old but still standing and sturdy.  The tour was not far, maybe a mile, but the permissive paths and public footpaths allowed more exploration.

We were given pedometers at this event, but I am less than convinced of their usefulness.  The friend I was with managed to do ~9,000 steps, while I did only ~6,000, but we walked the same distance!  I had clipped mine to my pocket rather than at the waist as instructed but I don't think this explains the discrepancy.  I obtained another one in a goody bag later in the week but it was faulty and I've only just got around to fixing it.  So wearing both for comparison just round the house for a while, one reads 371 while the other reads 746!  The pedometer contains a lever and fine wire acting as a spring.  The motion of a step moves the lever down so it briefly makes electrical contact with the circuit board, recording a count displayed on the LCD, before being returned back to open circuit by the spring wire.  The pedometers look identical and the wires are equally set, but it seems one does not make as good contact as the other.

Tuesday

I went on the Mid-Staffs Ramblers Walk, which was a very leisurely 4 mile walk around Sandon. I am a member of the Ramblers Association but had only walked with the Stone group before this.  I had done this walk and variations of it before but it was enjoyable and Gayton brook is a lovely little stream to visit.  The walk also included stops to tell us information about the estate, including such facts as the folly taken from Trentham Hall.  Particularly interesting was finding out why the church is so far from the village on the A51.  Reinterpreting this in my own words I gather that historically the main village was near the church but the toff at the time didn't like the plebs in such close proximity so had it flattened.

Sandon is conveniently close to the Hollybush Inn at Salt, now they know how to do a good lunch!  So I met another friend there for lunch after the walk.


Wednesday

I had thought I couldn't refuse a walk with cake in the title, so tried to book the Culture and Cake walk by credit/debit card over the telephone, but was told I would have to put a cheque in the post.  In the 21st century, really?  I thought that was too silly so I didn't bother.  I also wimped out of volunteering at Trentham North Park which I regularly do on Wednesdays as it was raining heavily.  So I didn't walk at all on Wednesday, I opted to go swimming instead.

Thursday


Following a non-festival ~5 mile Stone Ramblers walk in Derbyshire, over Hollins hill and around Chrome hill (because it was too windy to go over the top), there was still time for the Stone Heritage Walk: Culture and Canals.  

This was a very good walk around Stone with a wealth of interesting history, well attended despite the weather; rain, sun and rainbow.  It was good to be shown where the old roads ran as well as the canal and railway.  There was some interesting architecture including 2.5 storey Georgian style buildings, with the short top floor apparently for the servants.  A member of the group joked that they had a small staff.  We also saw the old mill, the home of Richard 'Stoney' Smith who invented Hovis.  The structure adjoining the left of the building was an aqueduct supplying water to the mill.

Friday


I attended the Nature Walk at Ferndown.  Despite being in the South of Clayton, which is close to Trentham where I live, I had not been there before.  This event was not well attended, perhaps understandable given that it was during a working day and perhaps also because of the location at the extreme North of Stafford Borough.  It was nevertheless very interesting.  

There is a lot of local community involvement with the nature reserve and little anti-social behaviour.  The nature reserve includes a variety of wild flowers and a recently planted apple orchard.  I was particularly interested to see and learn about sedge.  Rather than having the male and female flowers mixed as in grasses, each sedge has a stem of yellow pollen laden male flowers and two stems of purplish female flowers.




Saturday


I was very keen indeed to attend the Dawn Chorus Walk at Stafford castle, as I am a member of the British Trust for Ornithology and do volunteer bird surveys but identifying bird song is my weak point and I am trying to improve on it.  There was a glitch at the start of this event because security were meant to open the gates at 4.30am but hadn't arrived by 4.45am when I got there.  The other criticism I would have was the group, at ~17, was rather too big.  But having smaller groups would mean the organisers having to be up early on more mornings or finding other comparable leaders, which could be difficult as the walk leader was incredibly experienced and good at identifying bird song.  He said he had started learning from childhood.  So I'm probably well past it trying to learn at the age of 54, but I will persevere.

As well as the main track up to Stafford castle, there was a winding woodland path that I don't recall being there before.  This was the path we took to best encounter the birds.  Birds we heard included blue tits, great tits, chiffchaffscrows and woodpigeons that I am confident about and wrens, robins and chaffinches which I can sometimes identify but am sometimes unsure about.  The loveliest song we heard, in my opinion, was the blackcap but I do find it tricky to distinguish from a blackbird by song, the blackcap song is perhaps more flowing and slightly higher in pitch.  It was an enjoyable walk.
     

I congratulate Stafford Borough Council for a great week of walks.















Saturday, 23 March 2013

Mystery Walking


I'm a keen walker, I walk on my own, with one or several friends and with the Ramblers' Association (RA), particularly with Stone Ramblers. I haven't ventured out in the snow today but I'll tell you what I did last Saturday. I volunteered as a mystery walker for the RA. The idea is you are assigned an Ordnance Survey (OS) 1km x 1km grid square or can choose one. There are so many areas I like to walk in locally that I decided to let them choose. To retain a little bit of 'mystery' I'll not let on which square I got. Guess if you wish. Then you walk all the public footpaths in the square and note any problems, with grid references. This will allow the RA to create a map of where the best and worst places to walk are and identify what the most common problems are that walkers face. Any problems are fed back to the local RA group and can also be reported to the relevant council.

I have certainly found out walking that land owners vary greatly, some keep the footpaths pleasant and unobstructed while others seem to want to deter walkers. A particular problem, which I did not encounter on this occasion, is those who let their fierce dogs out. This seems to happen less when walking in a large group. I think mutual respect is the best course of action, respect for the public's rights and respect for owners property and the environment.

I walked 2.3km in the assigned grid square, but to make it more fun I did it as part of an 11.3km walk. That's 7 miles in old money. Speaking of old money, I found an interesting sign on a gate while I was out. 
“ANY PERSON WHO OMITS TO SHUT AND FASTEN THIS GATE IS LIABLE TO A PENALTY NOT EXCEEDING FORTY SHILLINGS.” 
Now I'm old enough to know that this is up to a £2 fine. It's a fair point, any gates we open we should also shut behind us, it's the same principle as leafleting houses.

I only counted problems in the assigned square, not on the whole walk. I reported 7 counts of litter actually on the path, though more litter was visible from the path, 2 counts of fallen trees across the path, 4 waymark issues, lack of a signpost from the road and what looked like it might be an exposed section of underground cable. I rated the walk 4 out of 5 for enjoyment, the litter being the main reason for not assigning a 5.

What was particularly unusual about the square I had been given is the OS map has the footpaths incorrectly marked. I think OS are great and normally highly accurate, but there is an issue here which I also reported to them. I had walked the particular path many times before and was always aware it didn't seem to match the map. This time I had a careful look for where the path was shown on the map and it was definitely different on the ground. Someone I met there told me the path had been diverted, following all the correct procedures, about 15 years ago.

I'd recommend volunteering as a mystery walker to anyone who likes getting out and about locally. It's both fun and useful. I've volunteered to do some more.