Climbing up to Crich in Search of Cardale
Uploaded by
toobaca
on Dec 16, 2014
Region: United Kingdom
Route type: Hike
Difficulty:
Medium
Distance: 11.60km, 7.21 miles.
Like (1)
About trip
The first five minutes of the walk are as uneventful as the rest is fascinating, and include such delights as a modern railway station and a busy road with heavy traffic. But as soon as youâve turned the corner and crossed over Chase Bridge youâre walking in a different world. An ivyclad wall effectively blocks sight and sound of the road, the railway and the canal, tangled with irises and pondweed ,ambles by slowly through the trees. Watch out for the bright yellow-and-black spotted longhorn beetle feeding on the meadowsweet and the holly blue butterflies in springtime. Familiar to Millions: On this journey you save the greater part of the canal walking to the end, in order to climb through the woodland of Crich Chase, once part of a hunting forest owned by the 13th-century Norman baron, Hubert FitzRalph. After climbing high fields and along a gritstone edge, known as the Tors, you come upon Crich (pronounced so the âiâ rhymes with eye). If you get that déjà -vu feeling itâs because Crich was Peak Practiceâs Cardale until the series moved to Longnor (see Walk 31) in 2001. Past the market cross and across more fields you come to the National Tramway Museum, which is well worth a visit. But you canât stay all day: there is a walk to be done! It continues to its high point on Crich Stand, a limestone crag isolated by an area of gritstone. Capping the Stand is a 60ft (19m) beacon tower, rebuilt in 1921 to commemorate the Sherwood Foresters killed in the two World Wars. On a clear day you can pick out Lincoln and its cathedral. Often youâll see kestrels hovering around the cliff edge, searching for their prey. The path descends through more woodland, beneath the shady gritstone cliffs of the old Dukes Quarry and down to the canal at Whatstandwell. The canal here has been allowed to silt up, and has become a haven for wildlife. Itâs well known for its many varieties of hoverfly, its azure damselflies and brown chinamark moths. Wealth of Wildlife. Yellow irises and flowering rush, which has pink flowers, can be seen on the waterâs edge, while broad-leaved pondweed clogs the middle of the canal. That doesnât seem to impede the moorhens or mallards though. By the time you get back to Ambergate you will have seen a wealth of wildlife, but you can rest assured that much more wildlife will have seen you. While you're there: Take time to visit the National Tramway Museum at Crich, where you can travel all day on vintage trams from all over the world. Thereâs a period townscape, including the Georgian façade of Derbyâs old Market Place, which was relocated in 1972, after the Derby building was damaged by fire. Thereâs also an all-day picture show. Staff are trained to help the disabled, and those with hearing or visual difficulties. Dogs are welcome in the museum. Itâs open daily from April to October. Take time to visit the National Tramway Museum at Crich, where you can travel all day on vintage trams from all over the world. Thereâs a period townscape, including the Georgian façade of Derbyâs old Market Place, which was relocated in 1972, after the Derby building was damaged by fire. Thereâs also an all-day picture show. Staff are trained to help the disabled, and those with hearing or visual difficulties. Dogs are welcome in the museum. Itâs open daily from April to October Take time to visit the National Tramway Museum at Crich, where you can travel all day on vintage trams from all over the world. Thereâs a period townscape, including the Georgian façade of Derbyâs old Market Place, which was relocated in 1972, after the Derby building was damaged by fire. Thereâs also an all-day picture show. Staff are trained to help the disabled, and those with hearing or visual difficulties. Dogs are welcome in the museum. Itâs open daily from April to October Where to eat and drink: The Hurt Arms at Ambergate is a popular family-friendly pub that serves food daily, but for those with more sophisticated tastes, try the Black Swan by the Market Place in Crich. What to look out for: St Maryâs Church was consecrated in 1135. It has a Perpendicular spired west tower with a Norman north arcade and a 14th-century chancel. Inside there is a circular Norman font, which is unusually large, and many tombs, including the one of Sir William de Wakebridge, whose family were wiped out by the plague Directions: Leave the car park at Ambergate Station and walk down the road under the bridge and then turn right along the busy A6. Turn right up Chase Road, which cuts underneath the railway bridge to the Cromford Canal. Follow the tow path northwards to the next bridge.2 Go over the bridge before following a footpath climbing into the woodland of Crich Chase. In the upper reaches of the wood the waymarked path swings left; follow it to pass through some small clearings. It then follows a wall on the right at the top edge of the wood. Turn right over a stile, then climb across two fields to reach Chadwick Nick Lane. 3 Turn right along the road. After 300yds (274m) a path on the left begins with some steps and a stile, and continues the climb northwards across numerous fields with stiles and gates â and by the rock outcrops of The Tors. 4 The path becomes an enclosed ginnel, which emerges on Sandy Lane. Follow this to the Market Square, where you turn left, then right along Coasthill. Coasthill leads to an unsurfaced lane. Where the lane ends, follow a path in the same direction across fields to join another lane by some houses. Follow this to Carr Lane, then turn right, passing the entrance to the National Tramway Museum. 5 Continue along the road to a sharp right-hand bend, then turn left along the approach road to Crich Stand, topped by the Sherwood Foresters Monument. Thereâs a small fee if you want to go up to the viewing platform on the monument, but otherwise continue along the public right of way on the right. The footpath, signed to Wakebridge and Plaistow, veers half right through shrubs and bramble, before circumnavigating Cliff Quarry. 6 The path then crosses over the museumâs tram track near its terminus, before winding down the hillside through attractive scrub woodland. It joins a wide track that descends past Wakebridge and Cliff farms before coming to a road. Turn right along the road for a few paces, then turn left on a footpath. This descends south across fields before swinging right to enter a wood. A well-defined path passes beneath quarried rockfaces, and crosses a minor road before reaching the canal at Whatstandwell. 8 Turn left and follow a most delightful tow path for 2 miles (3.2km) through the shade of tree boughs. At Chase Bridge you meet the outward route and retrace your steps back to the car park.