19 Jun 2021
I hadn't really planned to go out for a wander yesterday; I just got the urge and thought "why not?" (Well, the weather forecast was one possible reason, but I managed to avoid the rain, luckily.)
I wanted to finish off the A369—as it turns out I may still have a small section to go, but I've now walked the bulk of it out to my one-mile radius—and also a few random tracks in Leigh Woods. I'm still not really sure that I'm going to walk them all, especially after discovering today that "the map is not the territory" applies even more in the woods, where one of the marked tracks on the map wasn't really that recognisable as a track in real life... I'm glad I'd programmed the route into the GPS in advance!
Anyway. A pleasant enough walk, oddly bookended, photographically at least, by unusual vehicles. Leigh Woods was fairly busy, especially the section I'd chosen, which was positively dripping with teenage schoolkids with rah accents muttering opprobrium about the Duke of Edinburgh. I'm presuming the harsh remarks were more about taking part in his award scheme than the late Consort himself, but I didn't eavesdrop enough to be certain...
Or that's what is says on the gate, anyway. There are a lot of big posh hidden-behind-big-walls houses in this area.
The name caught my eye because it seems to be one of those words that could either be a beautiful flower or some kind of sexually-transmitted disease. Apparently it's a place in County Donegal. The golf course looks challenging...
This is what I've been using to record the GPS track for all my walks. It's old-fashioned, but I find it more accurate than the phone, plus it runs off a couple of AA batteries and I only have to replace them every few weeks. Today it wasn't just recording my track, but also guiding me through a pre-planned route. Here it shows me direction, distance and estimated time to my next waypoint.
This might explain why I've put off this bit of the A369 for so long. It's mostly just a boring road, desgined for cars.
I guess it's more to reduce road noise than privacy, but it seems a shame these lovely-looking houses are all just peeping over giant hedges and walls.
But plenty of people seemed to be cutting through, so I imagine the sign is more intended to stop it turning into a car park. I think the Forstry Commission and the National Trust (who each own different bits of Leigh Woods, if I remember correctly) have been experimenting with charging for parking at their previously-free car parks in the woods. That and the fact that Covid-19 restrictions seem to be upping visitor numbers (I guess because people are staying local and there's little else to do) has led to something of a parking problem in the Leigh Woods area.