Region: Leicestershire
From: Market Bosworth
From: Market Bosworth
Walk : Circular
OS Sheet: Explorer 232
Parking at: Bosworth Country Park
Grid: 412032
Distance: 8.10
mls, 13.00 km
Height Gain: 400
ft, 122 m
Height Loss: 400 ft, 122 m
Walking With: Mrs G & Katie
Walking With: Mrs G & Katie
Notes: Mainly fields and grassed towpath, few roads or stiles, some gates
Route
From the car park head west
through the town to the School, turn right up the side of the school, left down
the back, across the golf course to the railway bridge and on to the canal.
Follow to the bridge south of Shenton, leave canal, over bridge to the Station,
Ambion Hill, Sutton Cheney, the Lawns, north up the side of
Spring Wood to Bosworth Park and back to car park
Journey
Sundays walk around Market Bosworth was a typical first
proper walk of the year, decided at the last minute, too much gear packed in
the rucksack, in case it was cold, got lost getting there, the cameras battery
was flat and we (I) had several navigation faffs on a straight forward
walk. However, the sun shone, the sky
was blue, occasionally, and the wind was not too cold. It was lovely to be out
on something other than a dog walk around our local fields.
From the start we played spot the signs of spring, snowdrops
, bunches of crocuses, one daffodil, buds on trees and hedgerows and a cheeky
robin serenading us at lunchtime, golfers
all over the golf course and barges were moving along the canal.
We parked at the car park on the edge of Bosworth Country
Park a large area of what I would call heathland but others might call a park.
Either way it must be a real asset to the residents and visitors to Market Bosworth.
The town centre is small and neat and the square was very
full of traders and shoppers enjoying the sunshine, the banter, examining the
goods, buying and selling and absorbing the smells of frying Angus burgers and
onions.
Heading downhill we reached the school, walking along its
side and down the track to its rear and into a golf course where we had the
pleasure of watching a small plane taxi along a grass strip (not on the golf
course) turn, and take off, flying south west.
I had a good look at the golf course as we walked and could
not help but notice that it was undulating, but in an unnatural sort of way.
Some humps were too high and too steep, plus the the transitions between humps
and hollows and the flatter areas were unpleasing to the eye. Plainly it had been not built on the original fields,
even if they had an industrial heritage. Later in the walk, a local confirmed
that several million (!) tonnes of soil etc. had been shipped in to form the
golf course.
Our route crossed over the Battlefield Steam Railway line,
shame there’s nothing happening on it today, then we crossed the Ashby-de-la-Zouch Canal
and turned south along the towpath towards Shenton
Clearly the spring weather had bought people out walking and
cycling and at every mooring point several of the boats
had people on, most we assumed giving them a look over and tidy after the
winter and getting ready for the season ahead, although one or two were moving on. We stopped and chatted to a few
of the owners including those on a barge heading south, who kept pace with us for
over half a mile as we walked and talked, mainly about our dog and their dogs.
If you've read our only Blog in January, I mentioned that as I was being made redundant and taking early retirement we were thinking of getting dog, possibly a Labrador or maybe a Cairn Terrier. Well after much debate the Cairn won by a short head, and we picked up a rescue dog, Katie, from Glossop on a very, very wet and misty evening in early February. Katie is four years old, she has settled in very well, she’s friendly, usually quiet but with a loud bark. On the down side she gets car sick and we cannot let her off the lead, because if she gets out she is off at twenty miles an hour hunting every scent she can find. We have a lot of training to do.
In the past I have, on several occasions, stated that I do not
like walking along canal towpaths, because they are boring and because they are
so flat and so even that you walk faster than usual and every pace is the same
length, resulting in sore muscles and possible injury. Yet here I am walking a canal towpath again. My only excuse is that in order to make a good walk of
about the desired distance the only alternative route was along roads. So the
canal was the lesser of two evils. Also it is grass, not paved and is rarely even.
We stopped at Shenton Station spend a good half hour sitting
in the sunshine with a cup of tea and a Kit Kat admiring the Crocuses and listening to a disembodied
voice describing how he and his mates were getting ready for the mornings
battle, sharpening swords, preparing their armour and other things, over and
over again. This was our introduction to Market Bosworth Battlefield.
As we proceeded up to Ambion Hill we listened to several
more voices and read a bunch of explanation boards including a big one that
said something along the lines of: We
have told people for years that the battle of Bosworth (1485) was fought over
there, now after a proper archaeological
study, the battle actually happen in a completely different direction. As a result some of
the signs and explanation boards are being moved or replaced. While I found
this mildly amusing,they are doing the right thing as this battle was an important English battle, a turning point in English history and even if a few of
the details have moved, it is still the battlefield and Ambion Hill is a great
place to see it and learn about it from.
The walk back to Market Bosworth was spent talking as we
walked with Tom and Pat, from Markfield. Tom and Pat are two charming and well
travel people, with whom we had much in common.
It was a great pleasure sharing experiences, ideas and plans with them.
As I said at the start my camera battery was dead so I used
the iphone for a few shots. I apologise for the lack of photos and the poor
quality of these but whenever I pointed the phone to take a photo the only thing I could see was my reflection, very disconcerting.
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