Tuesday, 8 November 2016

A tearoom walk! Kinver to Wolverley along the Staffs and Worcs Canal

A brilliant walk for a crisp Autumn/Winter day, with several excellent places to eat.
It's 10 miles but if that's too long there are plenty of shorter variations See below for details.
I began at the Vine pub, at Kinver, with lovely scenery from the start. 


There are some remote houses high on the sandstone cliffs, with electricity, but little access by car

Almost all the walk is along the Staffs and Worcs Canal. The towpath is in great condition

Whittington Horse Bridge (you can start here to shorten the walk)

The Nail Mill Near Whittington Lock  - the area was once noted for mills

...all based on the fast flowing River Stour which runs next to the canal
A marker post told me I was now in Worcestershire


The canal was lovely in its Autumn colourings,...


...but this stretch puzzled me - did the trees not get the Autumn memo? They remain resolutely green here!

The much mended Caunsall Bridge  - (Another possible joining place - with good parking)

Boats and caravans near Cookley...
...complete with a heron on a boat. Not seen that before
Cookley Tunnel
The only industry on the route still visible - the rest has disappeared. This was an Industrial Revolution steel works but it later moved to Brierley Hill once canal/river transport proved too slow. It is now Titan Steel Wheels

The Tollhouse and Debdale Lock

The sandstone has been hollowed out to provide stabling for narrow boat horses,with a second hollow to allow the lockgate to open

From Cookley onwards, the canal is even prettier


...with beautiful waterside houses
Through the trees, I heard a noise...

...a couple of buzzards wheeling overhead
The trees made some of this walk rather shady - but ahead, in sunlight, Wolverley Lock. My goal.

Did you think canals just stayed neat on their own? A CRT worker (Canal and River Trust) strimming the lockside

I turned off the canal towards Wolverley, with its hillside church, and crazy golf course in front. The yellow blob turned out to be a camel when I got closer

It was about a quarter of a mile into Wolverley

...passing the Stour on the way
...with a rather worrying flood depth indicator nearby
A late lunch at the Old Village Store Tearooms (click to see more)


This was my first visit - my brie and fig chutney toastie was fantastic! The cakes looked good too


For the return journey, I took the same route
This time the heron was on a different boat (that's a model swan on th eroof, not a real one!)

This boat name is based on a local estate agent called Doolittle and Dalley, which always amuses me.
The shadows were lengthening

As I returned to Kinver, the clouds were rolling in
...and it was dropping dark as I returned to the Vine pub at the start of the walk










Today's walk: 
Park in (or bus to) Kinver. Start at the Vine pub, walk under the bridge and follow the canal towpath to the Lock Inn Wolverley. If eating in the tearooms, turn right onto the road, and then first right into Wolverley (about a quarter mile) return by the same route. 10 miles (or with cars either end, 5 miles!)
Options:
Start at the Whittington Horse Bridge takes it down to approx 8 miles return  - but parking is limited
Start at Caunsall  - good parking by canal. approx 6 miles return
Start in Cookley good parking approx 4 miles
Places to eat: 
Kinver: The old house tea rooms, Kinfayre Coffe Houses, Olga Dunn's cafe. All fantastic
Plus the Vine Inn and its all day cafe
The Manor House of Whittington - meals and snacks
Wolverley: The Lock Inn ( hot meals)  tea room: 
the Old Smithy Tea Room (by the canal)
Old Village Store Tearooms as visited on this walk




Thursday, 3 November 2016

The Seisdon Square - a great walk for Autumn colour

This walk is just over 5 miles, fairly flat, with good, far-reaching views at times, and beautiful Autumn colours throughout. It takes in the pretty villages of Trysull and Seisdon, and follows the Staffordshire Way along Abbots Castle Hill (more commonly known locally as Tinker's Castle)
Note (I did this walk before the colours were at their finest - to give you a chance to walk it at its best)


The best place to start the walk is here, by the church in Trysull , 5 miles SW of Wolverhampton.

The church would repay a visit, but I was keen to start walking.
I turned left, past the old cottages, to Manor Farm. 

... where I turned left again onto a path between intriguing outbuildings

The path keeps going in straight line (SW). I couldn't work out what these stacks were for - they seemed not to be used - but they served as a useful reference point as you can see them from many points along the route. It's reassuring that you are still on the right track.

The path is clear, and as it rises steadily, the views start to open up. This is over towards the Black Country, very leafy from here.

A totally useless stile - leans far too much, and everyone walks round it anyway

Reaching the top , I turned right, onto the Staffordshire Way

The views are great from here - as far as Shropshire's Brown Clee, 20 miles away

The path then followed a wooded ridge, with the sun just peeking through

Very easy to follow


If you wanted to continue seeing the views west over to Shropshire, you'd have to walk in the Winter, as there are too many leaves in the way! 

But there are plenty of views the other way - as I walked, Wolverhampton sparkled on the skyline.


Crab apples covered the ground - quite skiddy to walk on.

The end of the Ridge section heralded another right turn, down Tinkers Castle Road for a short way.

...then onto a farm track with the Staffordshire Way clearly, if somewhat drunkenly, marked on the signs

The weather began to close in, so I speeded up!

The Staffs Way then carries on down Post Office Road (leaning signs seem to be becoming a theme of this walk)

This house marked the third corner of the square (still Post Office Road though). I could have carried on along a path, but preferred to follow the road, past some lovely houses

Some of the which had spectacular gardens

And I loved this Victorian post box

Through Seisdon, and onto Church Lane, marked as a road on Google maps
 It definitely isn't a road though!

At the end of the road, the fourth corner, over the Smestow Brook bridge, with its 1904 weight limit sign

And from there, it was a hop and a skip back to the start, by the church
Today's walk: 5.4 miles through easy countryside. No steep climbs, but I expect it could get quite muddy. The walk is roughly a square shape. Start at Trysull Church, onto the footpath at Manor Farm, and follow this line (left for a short distance along a minor road (Cockington Lane), and then continue the general line right to the ridge by the B4176 (Locally, the Rabbit Run) Turn right, following the Staffs Way, to turn right at Tinkers Castle Road. After about 200 metres, turn left onto a farm track and then turn right, following the Staffs Way signs into Seisdon. Follow the minor lane, (Post Office Road) through Seisdon (or the footpath by the Smestow Brook if you prefer) Then follow what was once Church Lane, now a footpath. Turn right to get back to the start.