Part of the North York Moors National Park, the Cleveland Hills run along the north-west edge overlooking both Cleveland and Teesside. The name Cleveland coming from the Old English meaning 'land of the cliffs' which reflect its rugged escarpments. Here you have the highest points in the National Park, wild windswept heather moorland and wooded escarpments and valleys.
This is a land that saw the footprint of early man and yet was also a catalyst of the Victorian industrial revolution. In a series of nine walks, join the author as he explores this varied area and discovers part of its secret past.
Part of the North York Moors National Park, the Cleveland Hills run along the north-west edge overlooking both Cleveland and Teesside. The name Cleveland coming from the Old English meaning 'land of the cliffs' which reflect its rugged escarpments. Here you have the highest points in the National Park, wild windswept heather moorland and wooded escarpments and valleys.
This is a land that saw the footprint of early man and yet was also a catalyst of the Victorian industrial revolution. In a series of nine walks, join the author as he explores this varied area and discovers part of its secret past.
Reihe
Sprache
Verlagsort
Illustrationen
Maße
Höhe: 214 mm
Breite: 146 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-905444-65-6 (9781905444656)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Kev Shevels has been involved with outdoor sports since his school days when participation in the Duke of Edinburgh award revealed the beauties of hill and dale and resulted in him walking or running through the countryside of the North East and beyond for most of the last forty years. Many of these trips into the great outdoors were visits to the heather-clad uplands of the North York Moors, an area for which he has developed a great fondness.
Over the last twelve years, Kev has put pen to paper describing routes through the North East that reveal his passion for both the countryside and the history that has shaped it and the people who live upon it. That, coupled with an in-built curiosity to go and view things that spark his interest, tend to result in routes that take the reader into new, undiscovered areas and reveal a history that may not be apparent from the outside. He is not ashamed to admit that he is one of these boring people who can sit and spend hours reading a map like more normal people read a book. His great delight is coming up with new routes that he can subsequently explore and investigate. All of this has resulted in an easy to read, informative style of guidebook that has proved very popular among the walking fraternity and received very favourable reviews in both local and national press.
Now Kev returns to one of his favourite areas, the North York Moors, and in this, the fourth in a number of books that he is planning on the Moors, he explores that area of upland that frames the north-western edge of the Moors, the Cleveland Hills.
Kev Shevels has been involved with outdoor sports since his school days when participation in the Duke of Edinburgh award revealed the beauties of hill and dale and resulted in him walking or running through the countryside of the North East and beyond for most of the last forty years. Many of these trips into the great outdoors were visits to the heather-clad uplands of the North York Moors, an area for which he has developed a great fondness.
Over the last twelve years, Kev has put pen to paper describing routes through the North East that reveal his passion for both the countryside and the history that has shaped it and the people who live upon it. That, coupled with an in-built curiosity to go and view things that spark his interest, tend to result in routes that take the reader into new, undiscovered areas and reveal a history that may not be apparent from the outside. He is not ashamed to admit that he is one of these boring people who can sit and spend hours reading a map like more normal people read a book. His great delight is coming up with new routes that he can subsequently explore and investigate. All of this has resulted in an easy to read, informative style of guidebook that has proved very popular among the walking fraternity and received very favourable reviews in both local and national press.
Now Kev returns to one of his favourite areas, the North York Moors, and in this, the fourth in a number of books that he is planning on the Moors, he explores that area of upland that frames the north-western edge of the Moors, the Cleveland Hills.
Contents
Introduction
1. Introduction
2. Access & the Right to Roam
3. The Walks
4. The Weather
5. The Maps
6. Walk Location Map
Walk 1: The Bridestones and Bilsdale 7.8 miles
Walk 2: Commondale Moor 5.8 miles
Wayworth Moor Stone Circle
The Bride Stones
Hob on the Hill
Walk 3: Guisborough Woods 10.3 miles
Cleveland Ironstone
Walk 4: Scugdale and Whorl Hill 5.2 miles
Whorlton Old Church
Whorlton Castle
Walk 5: Baysdale Abbey and Armouth Wath 9.4 miles
Baysdale Head Colliery
Walk 6: Great Ayton Moor and Codhill Heights 8.1 miles
Great Ayton Moor Chambered Cairn
Walk 7: Ingleby Incline and the Thurkilsti 7.3 miles
Rosedale Railway
Walk 8: Quaker's Causeway and Commondale 7.8 miles
Quakers' Causeway
Walk 9: Cold Moor and the Garfit Gap 4.6 miles
The Garfit Gap
Appendix
Ferguson Grading System
The Author
Walking North East
Disclaimer