statcounter

Sunday 19 February 2012

Routine stuff – Rookhope Burn, Simonside Hills, Annapurna…. (Annapurna?)

sherpa van bruno at tosson hill

Another fun filled weekend here at Knipe Towers…..

Friday was the day for the guided walk at Rookhope – the route that nearly did for me on tilted ice (tiled over a drop into a beck) last week. twenty one people turned up, including the stewards Richard Hartley and Kathy Angel.

lunch by rookhope burn

We all had a perishing cold walk accompanied by a persistent and nithering breeze from somewhere really cold. But all the ice had melted, so we just had a little bit of mud. The big victory was that nobody slithered off into the beck. I enjoyed it. It was , maybe a bit harder than I’d advertised it, though, so whilst I’ll try to keep it in the programme (if there is another programme…) – I’ll say that it’s a medium hard. A hard medium, by the way, is one who slaps you for not being quiet during the seance.

Anyway, I think it went reasonably well.

you can see our house from here (view of crook)

Saturday was for climbing Annapoorna. The diary reads thus:  Saturday – Got up. Ate porridge. Did shopping. Climbed Annapoorna. Had tea. Watched TV. Usual stuff, really.      Annapoorna, I should add, is the name of a house up a hill just outside Crook. I have a short guided walk passing there next weekend. This was the reccy. It was cold again, but this time, it was sunny most of the time, but then it snowed; huuuuge lumps of snow with rainbows….  Very pretty. I’m not sure why a house in County Durham should be named after an Indian goddess, but it is. Fair dooze, I suppose… beats Dun Roamin or Jackandannie

simonside hills

Sunday (today, as it happens) was the day for the Simonside Hills. I’d suggested this venue to Yvonne for a walk with Mick (the peeps we met in the Cheviots) and this had reminded me that I’d not been there for ages and that I should go back and have a lovely walk…  So I did.

It was cold. (Bit of a theme developing here) Actually, it started at minus 2 with a fresh breeze off some maritime glacier somewhere, but accompanied by beautiful blue skies.  The path up to the top from Lordenshaws has been heavily engineered sisnce I was last here and it looks like the Pennine Way now, with lots of Lancashire mill slabs, pretty much all the way to the top. But it’s a fine ridge, with sandstone outcrops, easy walking and an extensive view from the coast to the Cheviots to the Pennines. I could make out Cross fell and the Dun fells quite clearly.

simonside

After Simonside, we continued to Tosson Hill where the view is just as big and the trig sits inside a cosy sun-trap of a lunch-time  shelter.

After that its a bit soggier till the forest, which is just dull, and then St Oswald’s Way back to the start. This started off badly with fallen trees and an ugly area of brash, then more forest tracks and a muddy slart for a while. Once out of the woods, though, it all becomes much better and the walk from Spylaw scout hut is a sheer delight of easy walking and big Northumbrian skies

a rocky tower

The totals for the weekend were 26 miles (Simonside was 12) and 2300 feet of up, one egg butty and one lancashire cheese butty, two banana, one mars bar, and one of those crispy ginger flapjack things. Bruno’s lunches included one undefined partially consumed sandwich found in the heather, six lumps of ice, an attempt to catch a grouse (failed) and a piece of cheese butty whilst I was distracted by a jogger’s lovely bottom.

Quite a good weekend, really…

simonside

11 comments:

Greg said...

Wow Simonside Hills. We lived in South Shields for 12 years and used to escape there at weekends.
went back to Rothbury last year inn camper van.
Brilliant stuff.

Mike Knipe said...

Here's a comment from Yasmin who's been having trouble getting blogger comments to behave.

Hi Mike
I've recently moved to Crook, and one of my first walks was around Annapoorna. A very strange name I thought, and now I know she's an Indian goddess!
While you were climbing Annapoorna I was walking around Hedleyhope Fell. Within ten minutes the weather turned from bright sunshine to whiteout blizzard. By the time we got back to Crook it was raining, then back to sunshine. Mad weather!


Yasmine


(id: www.muddytracks.wordpress.com)

AlanR said...

Cracking w/e Mike. Sunday was lovely if cold.
I must arrange to come up to your neck of woods and do a bit there.
Apart from the Pennine Way and the odd hill i have done very little to speak off.

Dawn said...

Looks good Mike. Wonderful pictures once more. You certainly are putting in some good mileage.Mind, diving in to burns is not the best idea at this time of the year! Lovely scenery too.

Mike Knipe said...

Greg - They're cracking hills aren;t they? I'd forgotten how nice they were...
Yasmin - welcome to Crook! Lots of walking around here to be done. Annapoorna's also a mountain. Mountains/Gods/Goddesses - they're all the same...
Alan - You should deffo come up here for some proper peat bogs. None of this namby-pamby Southern Peak district stuff, these are Gent's bogs.. (Now I say that again...)
Dawn - Brr doesn't bear thinking about does it? Weather looking spring-like for the end of the week...! Bring ambre solaire...

chrissiedixie said...

Nice views. Drove through the Simonside Hills on the way to exploring the Upper Coquetdale Valley and said they looked well worth aa trip in their own right. So many places to visit...

Mike Knipe said...

...and you can take your dogs Chrissie.... well worth the trip up there.

Alan Sloman said...

Have I missed something? I got an "Adult Content" warning before being allowed on to the Pieblog... Was it the jogger's bottom, I wonder?

I can't remember what I was going to write now. I'll remember tonight when I'm in bed asleep.

Mike Knipe said...

Its just a temporary thing, Alan - X cert till the extremely bad language in the next post to this one has been edited away.

Phil Ross said...

Very good Mike, Having spent my childhood in Durham and with both my parents from that neck of the woods (Esh Winning and New Brancepeth) it's good to see the homeland.

Mike Knipe said...

Esh is just over the hill from Knipetowers, Phil. But you knew that, I expect...