Click on any image for a slideshow
Our final outing of 2022 was to Silverdale, where we found a few new paths thanks to following Mark Sutcliffe's walk number 19, after which we visited first Rona, then Conrad, in Arnside.
After a coffee in the Leighton Moss bird reserve centre, Sue and I wandered over to the Causeway, where areas of reeds seem to have been cut back, perhaps in an attempt to expose the bearded tits to visitors. We saw a busy tree creeper, and later nuthatches foraging on tree trunks.
We normally go straight on here, but Mark guided us to the right, to a quiet lane along which we walked for a good kilometre. A right turn then took us steeply up to a leaf strewn, moss bordered path below Warton Crag. I don't think I'd been here before.
On a better day there would have been pictures of the view from the 163 metre summit of the crag, but today they would be just a mismash of greys. So the camera didn't come out again until we had descended pleasantly to Crag Foot and strolled a few metres along the main road to join the Lancashire Coastal Way as it headed under a waterlogged railway bridge and crossed the salt marsh.
The path, slithery at times, leads to Jenny Brown's Point, and a variety of views across the estuary towards the nuclear power station at Heysham.
The iconic chimney at Jenny Brown's Point is believed to have belonged to a short-lived copper smelting plant.
Dead Man's Fingers (Xylaria polymorpha)
Turkey Tail (Trametes versicolor)
Once through the Green, we headed along the path to Burton Well.
A most pleasant route of around 13km, with 300 metres ascent, taking around 3 hours, after which we visited both Rona and Conrad, both of whom are also happy to get rid of 2022..
Click on the image for a clearer view - the faint blue line is Mark's .gpx route,
the dark blue one is our route
So, with this posting being made on 1 January 2023, apart from a NYE parkrun, that's it for 2022. Some would say "good riddance", but we did have a wonderful weekly dose of Isabella, some lovely trips to Porthmadoc, and quite a few more highlights, so it wasn't all bad.
4 comments:
Touché.
An excellent round.
I was a little 'lost' also heading for the trig point, His directions are maybe not clear enough.
Wonderful fungi, are those fingers real?
Here's to 2023.
Yes BC, I did mean to mention that you bagged this one on 21 November, but I got carried away by Sue's fungi. The fingers are really quite small and you'll note that Sue failed to get them into focus. It's surprising how much there is to try to identify, even in the middle of winter.
Hopefully 2023 will bring some improvements over its predecessor!
A splendid walk over familiar ground for me. It was great to see you both and I much enjoyed your visit.
Beautiful walk with fantastic fungi images. I can't recall ever seeing dead mans fingers.
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