This was another of Tony Bowerman's 'Mysterious Cheshire' walks. Number 13. It starts from the National Trust Car Park on Alderley Edge, what3words: tulip.gentle.tried
The Wizard of Edge restaurant is currently closed, but the Tearoom is open.
This sign confirms that the pub is closed, but the Tearoom is thriving
After turning right in front of the tearooms, the path goes for a few hundred metres to reach a curve to the left, where stone steps after a 5mph sign lead up to the Engine Vein, where mining took place from Bronze Age times over 4000 years ago.
Before returning to the main track, I reached an area at the top of the Engine Vein, where the land is being allowed to collapse by way of natural processes.
A left turn back at the main path leads to a junction where a large sandstone block is known as the Golden Stone.
Tony Bowerman's book provides more information on this and many more of the features encountered on this walk.
Here we follow the signs to Stormy Point, passing to the left of good views to parts of Greater Manchester and Derbyshire, where the Lyme Cage folly can be seen.
The rocky summit of Stormy Point is soon reached.
Mine entrances are blocked off within the slot like excavation known as the 'Devil's Grave'.
Our route continues ahead, past a knarly veteran tree.
The path descends (above) before rising to the summit of Saddle Bole (below).
After returning to Stormy Point, the lower of two paths is taken to reach a slab-sided stone trough.
A second trough, this one oval and carved from a single piece of sandstone, is just around the corner. This is the Holy Well.
The path soon reaches a planked section, followed by steep uphill steps just visible in the next picture.
At the top of the steps, we take the path to the right, then 10 metres further on the yellow path sign to the right is ignored in favour of a narrow path that leads steeply up to a well surfaced path along the lip of the edge.
This good path leads to Castle Rock, with more fine views across the Cheshire Plain and beyond.
Continuing briefly beside a fence, we double back at the first opportunity and soon descend down stone steps past two stone posts.
At the bottom of the slope we head left past a low overhang.
About 100 metres on, as the path starts to dip downhill, the Wizard's Well is reached.
Our route turns around here and goes back past the bottom of the stone steps and posts, along a path that runs below the Edge.
We continue along the path pictured above, passing the steps that descend to the Holy Well. A drystone wall is soon seen on the right. This denotes a walled off area containing a roofed reservoir. The wall is followed around a corner to the right, then we rise to the left to a mound surmounted by a plaque that denotes the Armada Beacon.
Continuing on beyond the Beacon, a path wide enough for wheelchairs leads back to the National Trust car park.
Here's the route, just 3.5km with 75 metres ascent. It took me around an hour, but you could savour this area by taking twice as long as that, especially if you have Tony's excellent book to hand..