An Autumn Walk

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Horus
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An Autumn Walk

Post by Horus »

Last Thursday saw me setting out mid afternoon clutching my camera and hoping to grab a few last Autumn pictures before the wind or the onset of an early frost put an end to any further opportunity and saying as the rest of you were all putting up such splendid efforts for the best Autumn leaves pictures, I had to try to regain some lost ground. Autumn has well and truly set in around my neck of the woods and although the grass is still looking very lush as a result of all the wet weather we have had this year, the rest of nature has decided to just carry on as usual. As some of you may know I live on the top of a hill, so my walks usually involve a steep climb back home again unless I take the car, either way the usual direction takes me down a road with no footpaths so walking on either side and can be a bit dangerous in some parts or in poor weather conditions.
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The land to the left falls away quite sharply into fields and offers little chance of getting out of the way of vehicles and the area on the right is little more than space beneath the trees which at the moment is covered in fallen leaves. Even after reaching the main road which for the main part is lined with trees there are still lots of fallen leaves and I am noticing the abundance of yellow that is visible, mainly from lime trees and the profusion of sturdy evergreens such as this Ivy covered old tree, soon to be the last bit of green until spring returns.
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Looking back towards the higher ground the variations in colours ranging from deep copper to orange and yellows can be seen. Planted hedgerows and mature deciduous trees with a smattering of conifers and Ivy make a pleasing composition with the still verdant looking grass, just a pity that I was filming against the brighter sky with no filter.
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This tree in particular caught my attention and the afternoon sun was making it stand out with a beautiful orange glow, again it had to be taken against a brighter sky so my apologies for the blown image.
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After a short while I reached my destination with the late afternoon sun cutting across very low and illuminating the mature trees that border the road, Turning left and taking the footpath as indicated by the sign, I proceeded by climbing over the style and into the open fields, getting myself prickled by some pretty vicious thorns on the now bare Hawthorn hedges.
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Continuing up towards the small wood and looking back towards the road I could get a better view of these soon to bare mature trees, No doubt the next time I will be taking pictures of these trees they will be shrouded in winter mists or clothed in frost or snow.
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Passing through the small wood, I was once again into open pasture land and it was nice to be on the sunny side and out of the gloom. I have seen this small wood mature twice in my lifetime as I remember it well from my childhood, then I saw it razed to the ground as it was felled for timber. Obviously it belongs to someone, whom exactly I am not sure and I suppose it must have some commercial value that has to be cashed in at some point in time, but as I have watched it re-grow again over many years it has become like an old friend and I truly hope that I will not see it harvested again in my lifetime.
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Although the centre has many conifers and that can make for a sterile and gloomy interior, the outer edges have many deciduous and indigenous trees such as Oaks, Willows, Beech and Horse Chestnuts and I suspect that it is also the home of a nesting pair of Red Kites.
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Normally this field is empty, but on occasion there maybe some dairy cattle and occasionally young calves put out to graze, I can usually spot this by the trampled muddy path and the ‘pancakes’ as I pass through the wood. This time I was surprised to see this fellow, a fine looking Aberdeen Angus I think, or some other highland breed looking like maybe he owned the field. I kept a weather eye on him and my picture is taken on zoom, fortunately he displayed little interest in me I’m pleased to report.
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The afternoon sun was low and slanting across the newly ploughed fields, the straight furrows of clean fresh soil signifying the passing of another year, the last warm rays shone on the dying leaves of a young Oak tree with it’s yellowing orange tinted leaves. In the foreground the dried out stalks of Hog Weed still standing tall and the reddening leaves of Blackberry brambles.
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The trees towards the horizon will soon be bare and the bramble leaves will continue to turn a deeper blood red until the first severe frost gives them a coating of sugar frosting around the edges and an icy glaze to their surface. Soon after they too will fall and all that will remain will be the tangled wiry thorny stems as bare as the surrounding trees, the long forgotten home of Peacock Butterfly’s and their hairy caterpillars.
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Tall stalks of Rosebay Willow Herb open the last of their fluffy pods to the Autumn winds that will blow them away like the leaves on the golden trees. So another year has come and almost gone, maybe I will pay this place another visit to gather some Holly just before Christmas, although there seems little to show berry wise after such a poor Summer. Hopefully the Winter will be mild otherwise a lot of birds and wildlife that depends upon these food sources will not survive to see this bare earth bursting with early Winter wheat next year.
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It was time to head back home and as I entered the path into the wood I took my favourite picture for the day, I just wish the sky had been a bit more interesting.
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There certainly is a lot of gold to be seen at the moment, even the dying Bracken is turning a golden brown.
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One last glance back the way I had come before continuing into the wood, the last rays of the sun were passing through the leaves of this tree and I was reminded of this verse from a poem by Robert Frost:
The woods are lovely, dark and deep.
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep.
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Re: An Autumn Walk

Post by Grandad »

I enjoyed reading your very good illustrated account of your walk Horus...and particularly your poetic style :up
A really good set of pictures and I too like your fav and also the eleventh picture in the sequence that caught my eye. I like pictures with some foreground detail to add scale and depth to the image.

I am sure LLL will be very generous with her Autumn points. :) ;)
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Re: An Autumn Walk

Post by LovelyLadyLux »

All I can say is 'lovely H!' Truly lovely. You also had a terrific outting too. You sure do have a steep drop off. Really not good for walking at all. Lovely colours and I hope your stand of trees doesn't get taken down either. Thanks for sharing your walk with us. Lovely - almost like I was right there :) :)
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Re: An Autumn Walk

Post by LovelyLadyLux »

Geez Grandad ;) Your reply just knocked mine off ;) Not right off - just made my reply fade in and out ;)

Yessssssss Horus scores big time in the Fall Photo category!!!
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Re: An Autumn Walk

Post by Kiya »

Beautiful photos Horus & my fav has got to be the Aberdeen Angus, the best meat you can get :)
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Re: An Autumn Walk

Post by Horus »

I agree Kiya, Mrs H usually treats me to a piece each week, usually on a Tuesday with some lovely Broccoli and Butternut Squash that she oven bakes with a dash of Sesame oil. :eat
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Re: An Autumn Walk

Post by Ruby Slippers »

Wonderful photos, Horus, and I thoroughly enjoyed the narrative too! :up
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Re: An Autumn Walk

Post by Horus »

Glad you folks liked the pictures and the accompanying observations I make, I do find that the older I get the more I seem to notice the things going on around me. At one time I would just hurry from A to B, but now I like to observe nature more closely and as I am usually alone on my walks, then I tend to put those observations together in my head as I see them at the time and then recall them later should I happen to write something to go with the pictures if I decide to post them on here.
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Re: An Autumn Walk

Post by Winged Isis »

Lovely, H! In what part of UK do you live? Pm me if you don't want to make it public. The soil looks very rich. How far is that walk? Are styles unique to Uk, I wonder?
Carpe diem! :le:
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Re: An Autumn Walk

Post by Horus »

WI, the photo's are taken in Cheshire and Cheshire is renowned for it’s fertile soil which is quite light and sandy, probably due to the whole county being under the sea at one time eons ago. By varying the route or direction I actually take, I can make it last as long as I like. I usually try to plan my walks as a continuous loop, sort of heading out in one direction and sweeping around in a large circle to return home, a bit like the magnetic fields of a bar magnet, some are small and others are larger. In this way I can make them last as long as I want and take in quite a variation in my walks ranging from agricultural lands to woods and streams and of course my favourite canal walks, the later which can pass through idyllic countryside with views of old churches, manor houses and farms, or through the faded splendour of our neglected industrial heritage. That particular walk was quite short and probably in the region of a couple of miles as the day was almost gone when I set out.

Edit: Regarding the styles, I suppose that they derive from the fact that during the days of serfdom and robber Barons, most fields were small as they had to be planted and harvested by hand. As a result we inherited a unique pattern of hedges for field boundaries, these often contained animals that needed to be kept in, so I suppose there was always some method of climbing into the fields in order to cross them without having to scramble through a hedge to do it. Add to that the fact that because there were few roads at the time so many of these routes between small villages became established footpaths and rights of way, even through farmland. Today we have enshrined in our law “the right to roam” and organisations exist to ensure that footpaths have to be maintained and kept open, one obligation under the law enforces farmers or landowners to maintain styles where applicable, so these can be seen in hedgerows, besides gates and bridging stone walls.
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Re: An Autumn Walk

Post by LovelyLadyLux »

First time I ever heard of the law "right to roam." Don't know who those insightful people were who put that law into place and maintained but they were brilliant.

Here mostly the fight is on about beaches and ocean front. The gov't maintains all seafront from specified high tide marks belong to everybody and nobody can post 'no trespass' signs however there are many who try to make it look like their beach front belongs to them and erect quasi structures to stop others from having access to "their" (no) land.

In the USA an individual can definitely OWN their piece of waterfront and, unfortunately, they will and do stop any and all trespassers by any means available to them.

I was pleasantly surprised in Mexico to hear that all water front and beaches are free for all to enjoy.

Where I am here there are mega trails and walkways. Have only started to explore a few and most wind around and about and through residential areas.

"I" enjoyed your walk H! ;) ;)
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Re: An Autumn Walk

Post by Horus »

It was not always so and many big landowers, usually the upper classes were not happy about it as they too considered they owned everything for their own enjoyment. I have no problem with personal ownership, but I do object to all this land historically being in the hands of families who's own ancestors actually stole it from the rest of us by force of arms, hence my reference to 'Robber Barons'. One of my favourite replies to any big landowner who says to me "get off my land" is to reply "I'll fight you for it if you like". ;)

You may wish to read this Wiki article which gives a bit of background to it:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_Tresp ... nder_Scout
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Re: An Autumn Walk

Post by LovelyLadyLux »

Interesting piece of trivia H

This is what it says on Wiki:

The mass trespass of Kinder Scout was a notable act of wilful trespass by ramblers. It was undertaken at Kinder Scout, in the Peak District of Derbyshire, England, on 24 April 1932, to highlight that walkers in England and Wales were denied access to areas of open country. Political and conservation activist Benny Rothman was one of the principal leaders.

A commemorative plaque marks the start of the trespass at Bowden Bridge quarry near Hayfield (which is now a popular area for ramblers). It was unveiled in April 1982 by an aged Benny Rothman during a rally to mark the 50th anniversary. The trespass proceeded via William Clough to the plateau of Kinder Scout, where there were violent scuffles with gamekeepers. The ramblers were able to reach their destination and meet with another group. On the return, five ramblers were arrested, with another detained earlier. Trespass was not, and still is not, a criminal offence in any part of Britain, but some would receive jail sentences of two to six months for offences relating to violence against the keepers.

The mass trespass marked the beginning of a media campaign by The Ramblers Association, culminating in the Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000, which legislates rights to walk on mapped access land. The introduction of this Act was a key promise in the manifesto which brought New Labour to power in 1997.
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Re: An Autumn Walk

Post by LovelyLadyLux »

Interesting piece of trivia H

This is what it says on Wiki:

The mass trespass of Kinder Scout was a notable act of wilful trespass by ramblers. It was undertaken at Kinder Scout, in the Peak District of Derbyshire, England, on 24 April 1932, to highlight that walkers in England and Wales were denied access to areas of open country. Political and conservation activist Benny Rothman was one of the principal leaders.

A commemorative plaque marks the start of the trespass at Bowden Bridge quarry near Hayfield (which is now a popular area for ramblers). It was unveiled in April 1982 by an aged Benny Rothman during a rally to mark the 50th anniversary. The trespass proceeded via William Clough to the plateau of Kinder Scout, where there were violent scuffles with gamekeepers. The ramblers were able to reach their destination and meet with another group. On the return, five ramblers were arrested, with another detained earlier. Trespass was not, and still is not, a criminal offence in any part of Britain, but some would receive jail sentences of two to six months for offences relating to violence against the keepers.

The mass trespass marked the beginning of a media campaign by The Ramblers Association, culminating in the Countryside and Rights of Way Act 2000, which legislates rights to walk on mapped access land. The introduction of this Act was a key promise in the manifesto which brought New Labour to power in 1997.
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