Saturday 13 August 2016

Yorkshire Holiday 2016: Walking

The day after our arrival, my sister and I were determined not to use ANY means of transport apart from our own feet. And so, after the morning tour around the shops and the first visit of this year to the Cathedral (see previous post), in the afternoon we set off for a walk.

We felt it was a little too late to go for our favourite walk - to Fountains Abbey and back - and chose a route we'd not been on yet, just along the streets of Ripon and out to the fields at that end. Little Studley Road (which does not lead to either Studley Roger or Studley Royal) was quiet and leafy, but looked as if it ended at Little Studley park (holiday homes). We turned round and reached more fields after walking through a quiet, rather well-to-do neighbourhood.

Eventually, we arrived at the cemetery on Kirkby Road and made our way back into town from there.

Here are the pictures I took:








Quite by coincidence, we came across another part of Ripon's Sanctuary Way Walk:


I have written about it before.



On this cemetery (which does not all look like this part, trust me) we were surprised to find the graves of five German soldiers who must have been POWs in Ripon, as their dates of death were all in 1946 or 47, not during the war.

There were several rows of soldiers' graves from both World Wars. One of the boys was only 16; he had been a bugler and no military rank was given for him. Some others were 19 or in their early 20s; many were men who, judging from their age, most likely left behind a wife and children. Such a waste!

We did very much enjoy our first walk, though, and knew there was more to come.

12 comments:

  1. Looks like a very nice walk and a refreshing contrast to your long hours of travelling the day before :)

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    1. Yes, it was indeed both nice and refreshing!

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  2. When you walk you certainly see more and take in more than any other form of transporting yourself, even biking, I think.

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    1. Very true. I don't feel I really know an area unless I have walked in it.

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  3. How sad that those POWs died so soon after the war ended, and didn't make it home. It looks like a lovely walk though in some beautiful countryside.

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    1. It was, Gillian, and we knew it was only going to be the first of many more for this holiday!

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  4. What a beautiful place for walking! I never picture England with blue skies and sunshine like that. It looks like you had nice weather.

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    1. In all the years I've been coming to England for my holidays, I've only once had a really bad time (weather-wise). Usually, I get an average of one rainy day per week and maybe one or two showers in between or at night, which I don't mind at all.
      This year, we had one rainy day in two weeks - not bad!

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  5. Sounds like another lovely walk.

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  6. In some parts of the UK there are now significant populations of people descended from PoWs who just never went home.

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    1. That is an interesting aspect; one of the short stories in Rosy Thornton's "Sandlands" (I reviewed this a while ago on my blog) touches on PoWs in the UK and how the story may have gone for them from there.

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