Jubilee (Darwen) Tower - Taken from
Remnants.
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For nearly as long as I can remember I have had a love for high places. In essence it's not just a love of hills and mountains but more in particular Lancashire hills.
It began when I was a teenager. I would get home from school, blow off homework grab my trusty spotted companion (a dalmatian named Billy) and head for the moors. I loved the walk through the wooded valley and up past the reservoir before striding out on to the open moorland which is home to Darwen Tower. Billy loved it too. We spent hours and hours up there just wondering, sitting by moorland streams, listening to Skylarks and generally watching the world go by.
Even as I grew up that love didn't die. In fact it grew deeper as I joined Lancashire Countryside Service as a Volunteer Ranger and eventually working full time. Funnily enough, it was the same hills that I wondered as a boy that I now worked as a man. Sometimes, Billy would be with me too.
The Ranger Service broadened my knowledge of the hills and sent me to other areas to explore, firstly in the West Pennine Moors and Rossendale, then the South Bowland Fells along with Clougha to the far North finally settling in Central Lancashire and becoming intimate with Pendle, Boulsworth and the hills surrounding the Wycoller Valley.
I do love the Lake District, I love North Wales even more but there is nowhere like my home turf.
Some places I am really drawn to. One of these is known as Walton Spire. The Spire sits on Knave Hill high above the towns of Nelson and Colne in Lancashire, is directly between both Pendle and Boulsworth Hills and is in close proximity to the site Castercliffe Hill Fort.
Knave Hill is a bit strange. It is my opinion (and also that of others) that the hill is man made. Looking at aerial photographs it is possible to identify concentric rings of terracing that appear to be the construction of the hill. However, the site has another feature in the Spire it self. The bottom part of the cross is an ancient stone monolith that would have probably acted as a marker for travelers on the trade route from the Irish Sea to the North Sea or vice versa. It is possible that the monolith could be somewhere in the region of 4,500 years old although some legends say that it was erected in rememberance of the Battle of Brunanburh in 937. The top of the spire was added in the 1830's by Richard Thomas Wroe-Walton a local gentleman with strong religious values who live in Marsden Old Hall that still stands in nearby Marsden Park.
What ever the reason or how ever old the Spire is. I can't help being drawn to the place. Earlier this week I went up there in the snow and got some lovely pictures of it while enjoying a bit of pleasant if not cold weather! Even the sheep seemed happy to be there.
Sometimes when I read your posts about wandering on the hills and moors I wish I had spent more time in the beauty that is our doorstep! Alas I am a late bloomer but plan to make up for lost time (as soon as they add an extra hour to the day!) In the meantime your gorgeous pictures will have to sustain me, they make me feel like I am there in the photo...I don't know how you manage that!!
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