Starting at the railway station car park, Sue's 8-mile walk first took eight members across the nearby railway line and into the Poulter Country Park through which passes the 11-mile Archaeological Way which will eventually link Pleasley Pit Country Park and Creswell Crags. The redevelopment of the Archaeological Way has inspired some excellent community arts projects, many of which now form the Sculpture Trail in the park. This is situated on the site of the waste tips of Langwith Colliery which finished production in 1978 after 98 years of production.
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Poulter Country Park Sculpture Trail There are seven unique sculptures in, and near to, Poulter Country Park: 1 - Dragonfly; 2 - Scimitar Flower; 3 - Flint Flower; 4 - Industrial Fossils ; 5 - Top of the World ; 6 - Commemoration; 7 - Bridging the Gap |
Flint Flower by Ewan Allinson, said to represent the shape of a flint tool found locally |
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Top of the World sculpture by Ewan Allinson, inspired by the area's stone-age past |
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Not seen this time - Industrial Fossils by David Mayne, black ferns that represent the coal of Langwith Colliery |
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River Poulter emerges onto Nether Langwith Green |
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Nether Langwith Green |
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Cuckney Hay Wood |
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Lunch in disused limestone quarry |
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Almost derelict Langwith Mill on the Poulter downstream of Nether Langwith was a cotton mill built in 1786. It was powered by a large water wheel fed from a lake nearby |
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Langley Mill House being renovated |
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Back at the station car park ... |
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...and then welcome refreshments at the busy Jug and Glass after a hot and steamy but enjoyable day |
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Start: Langwith-Whaley Thorns station car park Grid reference: SK530708 |