Category: North York Moors

  • Flying the Flag on Roseberry

    Flying the Flag on Roseberry

    This Union Flag was flying on Roseberry summit this morning. I thought at first it was a BNP publicity stunt, one has recently been erected on Eston Nab, but hand written on the flag were hundreds on names, one I recognised was Lee Rigby so I guess they’re soldiers who have died whilst serving their…

  • Tripsdale – T’ Ship Steean

    Tripsdale – T’ Ship Steean

    With the dog having had her walkies at the crack of dawn I took the opportunity to have a dogless run and not be restricted to using Public Rights of Way and having to keep her on her lead what with birds nesting and lambs about. So I found myself driving into the Chop Gate…

  • Grisedale Tarn

    Grisedale Tarn

    Snow overnight above 500m. A big chill fsctor on the icey wind. To the left is Fairfield. Taken from St. Sunday Crag.

  • Lenten Lilies

    Lenten Lilies

    Lenten Lily is the Yorkshire name for the daffodil, the wild English variety. I’m not sure if these are indeed truly wild daffodils but I like the name. Daffs are poisonous nevertheless they have been used throughout the centuries for medicinal purposes particularly as a cure for cancer. Hippocrates himself recommended a pessary prepared from daffodils for…

  • Brian’s Pond

    Brian’s Pond

    On Bilsdale West Moor, an oasis on a warm spring morning. I often disturb ducks and wild geese here. But not today. The obvious question: who was Brian? I’ve no idea.

  • Cleveland Survival

    Cleveland Survival

    A checkpoint in Bransdale. The Cleveland Survival is a 26 mile event superbly organised by the Cleveland Mountain Rescue Team as part of their fundraising activities. The course is not revealed until after you have started and involves visiting several checkpoints such as this which are all manned by members of the team. Well done. This year’s event…

  • Little Blakey Howe

    Little Blakey Howe

    A bronze age burial mound, or “round barrow” on Blakey Ridge above Rosedale. The stone was erected as a boundary stone in the eighteenth century and is probably a reused standing stone of older antiquity. The contrails high amongst the cirrus clouds can be used as a navigation aid. “Contrails” is an American word, a…

  • Victorian Graffiti

    Victorian Graffiti

    Roseberry Topping gained its distinctive shape on a May night in 1912 when an land slump caused the cliff to collapse. At the time the ironstone mining was blamed but I understand that it is now thought to have been just a natural occurrence. But prior to 1912 the temptation to graffiti the summit sandstone was…

  • Searching for the Cook Family Cottage

    Searching for the Cook Family Cottage

    What a change from yesterday. A bitterly cold wind. Helped out this morning with an archaeological survey in a small copse where it is thought the cottage was in which the young James Cook lived. The site is on National Trust land close to Aireyholme Farm where Cook’s father was employed as a farm labourer. Two surveys were…

  • Roseberry from Ryston Bank

    Roseberry from Ryston Bank

    After yesterday’s Victor Meldew posting I felt the need to post something more pleasanter. Until not so long ago this view of Roseberry from the north east would not have been possible. The hillside as far as the fence that can just be made out beyond the crag was blanketed in forestry. It has since been cleared felled…