Dry-stone walls, Derbyshire April 6, 2009
Posted by shortfinals in British Isles, Derbyshire, England, New England, Peak District, Prehistory.Tags: agriculture, architectural design, caravan, Carl Giles, cartoon, cartoonist, cattle, cattle pen, cultural link, Derbyshire, Dry Stone Walling Association, dry-stone wall, England, field boundaries, fields, flocks, foundation, France, frost, garden design, Germany, Giles family, Great Britain, harsh weather, herders, horizontal 'key', ice, key, livestock, maze, Middleton by Wirksworth, Millenium Wall, mobile studio, National Stone Center, Neolithic, New England, Peak District, Peak District National Park, predators, sheep, sheep folds, Sweden, thorn hedge, tour
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- Dry-stone walls, Derbyshire
Since Neolithic times, herders of sheep and cattle have sought to construct sheep folds and cattle pens to defend their livestock against predators. They also wished to define the limits of their own fields. Planting thorn hedges worked to an extent, but in harsh weather a dry-stone wall is best.
Mam Tor, the Shivering Mountain January 8, 2009
Posted by shortfinals in Derbyshire, England, Prehistory, Wales.Tags: Castleton, Derbyshire, England, Peak District National Park, Prehistory, Wales
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Mam Tor, viewed from Castleton
One of the most spectacular sights, in a county of spectacular sights, is Mam Tor (which roughly translates as ‘the mother’s peak’) near Castleton, Derbyshire, in the heart of the Peak District National Park. Wildly unstable, in geological terms, its layers of shale and sandstone are constantly on the move; in the 1970s, the Sheffield to Manchester road which used to run around the southern edge was finally closed, and subsequently destroyed by a landslip. The huge ‘bite’ you can see on the south summit happened much earlier. Topped by the remains of an Iron Age hill fort, Mam Tor offers wonderful views; you can see the city of Manchester, Stockport and even into Wales if the day is a clear one. One word of warning – if you do visit, watch out for the very strong ‘venturi effect’ wind on the summit; you can literally be blown off your feet!


