Pages

Tuesday, 8 August 2023

Barton's Unpoetic Hills

Part of the joy of reading English maps is the place-names - their quirkiness, their beauty and sometimes their sheer silliness all contribute to the poetry of place. But here we are today, right outside a church, in Church Road. We're here to start a walk in the village of Barton-le-Clay. The hills just south of here are called the Barton Hills and the springs which issue from the base of the slope are called Barton Springs. 



It's all rather a shame because, despite the prosaic name, this little part of the village is rather quaint and the walk today is as fine as anything ever featured on this blog. So we'll commence putting one foot in front of the other in a vaguely upwards direction.



Soon we've gained enough height to look out upon a wooded hill with the altogether more satisfactory name of Sharpenhoe Clappers. A glance at the map reveals Wayting Hill, Fairy Holes, The Meg, and Moleskin Hill along this north-eastern edge of the Chilterns. Barton Hills has clearly missed out in this naming-game.



From up here the village looks as though it's lost in a primeval forest, rather than standing on a busy road in agricultural Bedfordshire. 



The grassy slopes are already taking on an artistic aspect. The walk is steadily uphill but with many pastoral views, pretty wildflowers, butterflies and soaring birds of prey to interrupt progress on such a clear sunny morning. 



A couple of poppies were blooming at the edge of an arable field.



We're walking up one side of a complex valley that cuts into the chalk hills, then heading around the top of that valley, with great views all the way.



You'd expect an English landscape like this to have names for every bump and hollow, but if it ever had them then they are lost in the mists of time. At this point I wasn't absolutely sure of which route we'd take to get back to the village. There are two or three paths marked clearly on the Ordnance Survey's 1:25,000 map, but there are also rumours of other tracks if I can find them.



We managed to locate a rather sketchy track penetrating the trees and bushes, which slowly became more and more recognisable as a viable path for the progress of aging pedestrians. The wood we were passing through does at least have a name - Leet Wood, which probably just means "the wood that has a stream in it".



A yellow Brimstone butterfly paused long enough for a photo. The ones you see earlier in the year seldom settle much at all. We found the little watercourse we were promised too, and followed it for a short distance upstream.



And this unimpressive place is the source of a chalk stream, one of the less common wildlife habitats in England, and indeed the world. Several of these insignificant trickles will eventually unite to form the River Ivel. The water here has percolated through the porous chalk rock and is particularly pure. The old maps that I'd been trawling through, looking for forgotten place-names, revealed that a century or so ago there were watercress beds in this out-of-the-way place.



Without too much trouble I found the next path I was looking for, which contours its way around the hillsides in almost "Alpine" fashion, threading through wildflower-strewn meadows.



Here's Yellow Wort, a specialist of these chalky hills, with a Harebell sneaking into the upper-right corner of my shot.



And a little butterfly that even goes by the name of Chalkhill Blue.



The striking purple blooms of Clustered Bellflower.



And here we look back on the path we have travelled as we approach the village once more. Of course I had to try my luck at the church, but it was firmly locked, as it always has been whenever I've passed this way. Never mind, we're off to get a pub lunch - and their door will definitely be open!




Take care.


27 comments:

  1. What lovely views and wildflowers!

    ReplyDelete
  2. What a lovely ramble. The chalk hills present some interesting land features. Love the blooms of course. Hope lunch was great!

    ReplyDelete
  3. It is so pleasant to go for a virtual walk in unfamiliar country and read the strange place names and above all to see unfamiliar wild flowers-clustered bell flower, yellow wort and butterflies I have never seen 'in the wild'.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I enjoyed your stroll and all the flowers...interesting to find the headland of the stream.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Las casa me parecen pintorescas y los paisajes se ven preciosos.
    Un abrazo

    ReplyDelete
  6. Looks a wonderful area - and so rich in wildflowers and butterflies. I don't know the chalk species, apart from harebells. I wonder if chalk flowers like the yellow wort also grow in limestone? Must look out for them.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. According to my little book Yellow Wort does grow on limestone (and also on sand dunes), but maybe not as far north as your part of Yorkshire.

      Delete
  7. Another wonderful walk. I love the Chalkhill Blue butterfly.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Yet another truly delightful walk. Thank you. And it was kind to my wobbly legs too.

    ReplyDelete
  9. The wavy rooftop is a bit Irish? The natural scenery is astounding

    ReplyDelete
  10. Loved those pictures of the rolling hills!

    ReplyDelete
  11. Great walk. I'm always curious about English place names. Some names go far back in history.

    ReplyDelete
  12. That blue butterfly looks so ethereal! I think that the 6th photo, with its sweeping valley, is my favorite, but many of your pictures today look like Impressionist paintings. Lovely.

    ReplyDelete
  13. There is nothing to compare with the English countryside on a sunny summer's day. A beautiful walk.

    ReplyDelete
  14. You have captured an area known to me beautifully. Did you take the little footpath that starts across the road from the church which runs along the side of the pretty thatched cottage?
    Names such as Barton-le-Clay, and Barton Spring were very aptly named for us by our ancestors.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I know the path you mean though we didn't use it on this walk.

      Delete
  15. Regardless of the name, the area is singularly beautiful. We have our share of entertaining and quirky names in Canada - how about Medicine Hat or Moose Jaw, Come-by-Chance or Musquodoboit? St. Louis de Ha-ha is not bad, and then there is the infamous Dildo in Newfoundland. It goes on!

    ReplyDelete
  16. Another gorgeous walk! The Chalkhill butterfly is stunning. Thanks for sharing your adventures with us.

    ReplyDelete
  17. I love that little path. Can you imagine the feet that have walked it before yours? Is there any indication of how old it is?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Everything about the way the track goes around the hillsides, maintaining the same level, leads me to think that the feet that first made it belonged to sheep rather than humans! It's been utilised by recreational walkers in recent times but I'd bet that it was one of our woolly friends who first had the idea.

      Delete
  18. The names can reveal so much history.

    ReplyDelete
  19. I so wish that this delightful walk was on my doorstep. The rural vistas and wildflowers are wonderful and your Chalkhill Butterfly image is perfect.

    ReplyDelete
  20. Thank you, John, for another interesting walk. Wish I could share the pub lunch.

    ReplyDelete
  21. Hi John - isn't it stunning - or was on that day ... and so near the A6 ... the pub lunch sounds good after your walk around. I love the names our country has in its countryside ... cheers Hilary

    ReplyDelete
  22. Beautiful wildflowers. The chalk stream source is fascinating. And those two little poppies all by themselves!

    ReplyDelete

Thanks for taking the time to comment. I'll try to answer any questions via a comment or e-mail within the next day or two (no hard questions, please!).