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This walk: 2012-1-11. ?????????????????????????
Walk details below - Information about the route etc.
Some captions are copied from a similar walk on 16 March 2011.
Longash Leat, passing Four Winds (car park) - it goes on to run between the two Merrivale stone rows to Longash Farm.
The take-off point on Long Ash Brook for Long Ash Leat at SX 56409 74806. The stream comes from the left and continues, quite reduced, towards upper left while the leat runs towards upper right: this is seen in the following movie.
Dartmoor CAM movie The take-off point for Long Ash Leat from a stream near Four Winds
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Click the photo to download File size: 2 MB. Time to download: e.g. 13 secs Length 11 secs |
An old explosives store, at SX 56541 74837, for West Mead Quarry (visited later) .....
The store (at far right) near the stream that gives rise to Longash Leat.
Hill 60 Quarry - SX 56985 74773, with the TV mast behind.
Pony in the wind.
Approaching Hollow Tor Quarry, SX 5710 7455, elevation 470 metres (1541 feet) ..... worked for its granite until 1919 .....
Another view of Hollow Tor, with a hollow in the middle.
Rundlestone Tor, SX 577 746.
Old prison boundary stone at SX 57731 74452. The stone bears a broad government arrow head, very near the top of the stone.
"There are two bound stones of coarse red granite ..... that are of interest, showing the grooves of feather and tare; one to the south of North Hessary tor at SX 5834 7372, the other to the north between the tor and Rundlestone Tor at SX 577 745. Each has an incised six inch arrow on its east-facing side. ...... Both are, however, on the Forest bounds and are thus misplaced as the original bounds granted to the prison did not extend that far westward ...... " Source: Dave Brewer, Dartmoor Boundary Markers, Halsgrove (2002), p. 260.
As previous, showing the proximity of the TV mast.
Simple pillar at north edge of Rundlestone Tor - SX 57631 74615. This may or may not be a marker stone.
A Directors of Convict Prisons prison boundary stone at SX 57828 74308. Originally, Originally, the prison had 390 acres granted but this was extended by 1,000 acres in 1867 when the whole area was marked by these boundary stones. The Directors of Convict Prisons was a body founded in 1850 following the ending of transportation from 1840 and the phasing out of prison hulks in Plymouth, Portsmouth and other places. Source: Dave Brewer, Dartmoor Boundary Markers, Halsgrove (2002), pp. 260-262.
As previous photo, showing context
The TV transmitter base at North Hessary Tor, built in 1955: an FM radio and television transmitter which uses as aerial a 196.0 metre (643 ft) high guyed mast.
Part of the guying system for the transmitter aerial.
North Hessary Tor, SX 578 742, elevation 517 metres (1696 feet), plus trig. pillar. A PCWW inscription is found on the west facing slope at the extreme right of the photo, at approx. eye level.
As previous photos.
Zoomed view of part of the mast .....
As previous photo.
A view around North Hessary Tor.
A view around North Hessary Tor.
A view around North Hessary Tor.
"Stone" - granite cube, at SX 57575 73690. Was someone making a very large dice? (Not on KR official walk).
"Stone" - TA - SX 57608 73521 (Not on KR official walk).
TA stone - SX 57407 73658 - see previous stone in distance (circled). (Also, not on KR official walk).
As previous but looking to the next stone (circled), not visited. (Not on KR official walk).
Foggintor Quarry, with King's Tor behind.
Ruins of the old quarry manager's house.
General view inside Foggintor Quarry.
Dartmoor CAM movie Looking into Foggintor Quarry on a very windy day!
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Click the photo to download File size: 2 MB. Time to download: e.g. 13 secs Length 11 secs |
Another view of the ruins of the quarry manager's house.
Along the track towards Foggintor and its large quarry, granite sleepers of Sir Thomas Tyrwhitt's horse-drawn tramway (Royal Assent granted in 1821), complete with grooves and fastening holes to hold the rails - the old tramway from Foggintor Quarry .....
Foggintor / Hill / Royal Oak Quarry - started by 1820�s, owned by Pethick Brothers by 1900, heyday 1840�s employed hundreds of men, it closed in 1906 and the operations concentrated on the more modern Swell Tor. Hill Cottages, at the quarry � by 1850 there were 10 dwellings here, all had very productive gardens, washing lines and privies on the Big Tip.
Ruins of Eva's Farm. Source: Kath Brewer (1997), The Railways, Quarries and Cottages of Foggintor, Orchard Publications, Chudleigh, Newton Abbot, map p. 81.
SX 56785 73923, normal, free-standing TA stone closest to Yellowmead Farm .....
SX 56963 73901 - up the slope from Yellowmead Farm, further away than the stone in the previous photo.
A would-be cist? At SX 56710 73978, near Yellowmead Farm.
Note the "A" behind the middle fence post - SX 56660 74031, with Yellowmead Farm behind ..... also note the gatepost with gate hangers, possibly this TA stone was moved for use in a gateway?
Part of another TA stone, this one is incorporated into the wall.
The Cake Stone - SX 56711 74115 (Battenburg).
Another view of the Cake Stone.
The Bronze Age settlement at SX 5642 7448.
TA stone at SX 56313 74507 .....
Another TA stone at SX 56403 74411, with Yellowmead Farm in the background .....
As previous photo, looking towards the stone at SX 56313 74507, with Four Winds behind.
Explosives store by West Mead Quarry - SX 56454 74621 (Four Winds behind).
West Mead Quarry - SX 56505 74653 with the tees at Red Cottages in the background. The quarry was owned and worked by Eric Green and his brother until 1966. Eric started at the quarry when he was 16 and it was owned by an uncle. They worked eight-hours a day, using a 4 lb lump hammer. Latterly, they brought granite from Merrivale and worked it here, making headstones and kerb stones. Later, they bought a compressor to make the hard work easier. Eric Green maintained that granite DOES have a grain and that it always beds parallel to the ground, but that it can be split in most directions.
Looking across the quarry towards the Four Winds car park, with Great Staple Tor behind (centre). The remains of the smithy walls can be see above the quarry entrance: Source: Kath Brewer (1997), The Railways, Quarries and Cottages of Foggintor, Orchard Publications, Chudleigh, Newton Abbot, p. 79.
Fallen tree at Red Cottages, an old Christmas tree similar to that at Four Winds? Blown down in the 1980s. Source: Kath Brewer (1997), The Railways, Quarries and Cottages of Foggintor, Orchard Publications, Chudleigh, Newton Abbot, p. 88. The blow-down may have occurred during the Great Storm of 1987, when a lot of trees, especially at Burrator, were blown over.
Red Cottages, SX 566 747 ..... a row of paired gate posts can be seen in front ..... there were 6 buildings with 2 dwellings in each, painted with red lead, built 1847. In 1861 (the census) there were 50 adults and 38 children living here, with 267 souls in the area.
Looking along the front of the cottages towards Yellowmead Farm.
Close-up between a pair of gateposts.
Baaa-aaa-aaa-aaa
MAP: Red = GPS satellite track of the walk.
Ordnance Survey © Crown copyright 2005. All rights reserved. Licence number
100047373.
Also, Copyright © 2005, Memory-Map Europe, with permission.
This walk can be approached from Tavistock or from the Princetown direction on the B3357, parking a little east of Merrivale at the Four Winds car park, marked by the yellow cross and the P symbol on the map. The parking area is marked by a stand of trees.
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