Just over three years ago - blimey, that long! - we did a walk on Dartmoor that started at Norsworthy Bridge near Burrator Reservoir and took us to Down Tor stone circle and stone row (also known as Hingston Hill stone circle and stone row). It was a beautiful day and a stunning walk and I figured at the time that at the end of the row and over the hill must lie Nun's Cross and how, on another day, I should walk to the stone row and stone circle from there. So yesterday I did.
The weather could have been brighter, although it was very lovely in that moody way Dartmoor so often affects.
And the company was good.
In fact, it looked for a while as if there were going to be quite a few of us in our merry band.
First, though, a rendezvous with the many-times-visited Nun's Cross, which I love for reasons listed elsewhere ...
...before we climbed the hill to Eylesbarrow, from where we could see over to Haytor Rocks and Hameldon to the east ...
... and a sizeable section of our route to the west. The first part consisted of hacking our way over rough ground to Narrator brook, made visible by extensive tin workings, while ravens croaked overhead.
Looking over to Combshead Tor ...
... and Hingston Hill stone row and circle
View back the way we came
The stone row isn't that long but it does have presence. Here's the view from the end stone, looking back along the row to the circle ...
... and over to Leather Tor and Sharpitor.
The view back to Sheepstor
Bronze age enclosure in the foreground with Leather Tor and Sharpitor behind
Cairn
Looking over to Newleycombe Lake
(A lake is not a lake on Dartmoor, it's a stream.)
Over to Devonport Leat Cross
Tinner's hut
And then Nun's Cross came back into view, and we were officially on the return stretch.
A chance for Ted to have a drink and a wallow.
We had one last stop on the way to a very crowded Chagford, where we were due to deliver maps of the three hares churches by Dru Marland, at the Warren House Inn and by Bennett's Cross, which looked wonderful with a backdrop of heather.
Back at home the pain of distance was helped, just a little, by adding the loop of the walk to my map. Nowhere else matters as much as Dartmoor, or even comes close.
Admiring Foxtor Mires isn't difficult. They are reputedly the worst mires on the moor - so deep, in fact, that they can swallow a man wearing a top hat and sat on a horse.
Luckily, Son the Younger and I hadn't brought any horses with us, or posh headwear. Furthermore, we were planning to circumnavigate the inspiration for Conan Doyle's Great Grimpen Mire rather than traverse it. We would be fine.
Having parked on the road to Whiteworks, we started out walk, the first stretch of which took us alongside Devonport Leat, at least until it disappears into a tunnel under Nun's - or Syward's - Cross. Here is a sheep leap, one of many along its length.
We then turned east and walked through extensive tin workings. It's tranquil now, but once it would have been bustling industrial site.
We then followed this handy wall for some way towards our most famous landmark of the day, Childe's Tomb.
Looking up to Fox Tor
Looking north to Fernworthy and Hameldon on the horizon
A wall built over a stream
Ted showing an ardent interest in a couple of sheep
A short diversion from the wall and we were at Childe's Tomb.
The following is an outline of the story of Childe the Hunter from my novel, Dart, told by my hero, Tobias, who has been caught out on the moor in a snowstorm:
Of all Amyas’s tales, the one that chilled him most
concerned Childe the Hunter. A Saxon lord or so the story went, he’d been
overtaken by the sort of snowstorm Dartymore could conjure on a whim and, in a
desperate attempt to keep warm, had slashed open the belly of his steed,
stripping out its pulsing guts and crawling inside its corpse. Which was where
monks from Tavystoke had found him days later, entombed in flesh and ice and quite
dead. This very cross was said to mark the spot, and if Tobias wished to avoid
his fate he’d turn straight back.
The fact that the tomb part of the monument is a prehistoric kistvaen suggests that the body buried here was that of a tribal chieftain, not a Anglo-Saxon lord - and certainly not a Christian. It's a great legend, though, which is probably why it has stuck.
I confess I wrote about this part of the moor without having walked it. I was familiar with it from studying maps and peering at it from the other side of the mire at Whiteworks, but I'd always felt a bit fraudulent, having never sat there, like my hero, in contemplation.
In fact, it was as atmospheric as I had imagined, and apart from the occasional bovine cough, totally silent now that the larks have stopped trilling their beautiful song ('Get-the-fuck-away-from-my-nest, get-the-fuck-away-from-my-nest ... ).
Our next task was to cross the River Swincombe - a shortlived yet beautiful river, which, after its journey through this great amphiteatre of mires, debouches into the West Dart, a little to the north, at the staggeringly gorgeous Sherberton Firs.
Tobias has to cross the river in winter:
Keeping his chin tucked into his chest, he descended
the western flank of the hill to the roiling river at its foot. Although it
sprang only a short distance to the south, so much rain had flooded the uplands
that its trickle had become a torrent, plummeting down the gully and all but
submerging the boulders that served as a crossing. Tobias bent to scoop up a
handful of water. Its bite was icy, freezing his fingers and making his teeth
ache.
For us it was easier - Son the Younger and Ted managed it quite easily - but it was pretty demanding on my arthritic knees and ankles.
By the ruins of an old settlement we disturbed a flock of crows.
Ter Hill
After a difficult section of the walk across tussocks that were quite boggy at times, we reached the track alongside Wheal Emma leat - now dry - and then the access path leading from Swincombe Intake Works.
The easier going made it easier to appreciate the beauty of the broad river valley ...
... with views over to Bellever Tor and Laughter Tor, and skies to die for.
Heading west, we passed the ruins of Swincombe Farm.
Then we took the track back to Whiteworks, crossing the Strane (a tributary of the Swincombe) which proved pretty squelchy and resulted in late-in-the-day wet feet.
A trying last half mile uphill to the car on aching hips and knees was mitigated by the view looking back to where we'd been - beautiful, dangerous, wild Foxtor Mires.