Well Nancy has proven she can do the hard walk and has rejoined us easier walkers for her final day. Today we are dropped of at the Ribblehead Station. We start our day at the a small rail station that now is a museum gift shop and yep a small tea shop. We then head down to see the Ribblehead Viaduct. This is something I find totally fascinating. For those of you who don't know a viaduct is a stone train bridge. Details on this one:
"Ribblehead viaduct is 440 yards (400 m) long, and 104 feet (32 m) above the valley floor at its highest point.
[2] It is made up of twenty-four arches of 45 feet (14 m) span, with foundations 25 feet (7.6 m) deep. The north end of the viaduct is 13 feet (4.0 m) higher in elevation than the south end.
[3] 1.5 million bricks were used in the construction and some of the limestone blocks weighed 8 tons each"
This viaduct took 4 years to make and 220 people died in the making of it. It is only used for freight trains now. After checking this our we hopped back on the bus and headed to Ingleton to see the waterfalls. They are on private property in a park. We climbed stone steps for an hour to get to the top thru one of the most beautiful areas we've been in. There is waterfall after waterfall. Once you get to the top you look one way and see beautiful green hills and valleys, you look the otherway and see the limestone scars. drastic changes between the different views. both beautiful in their own way. At the top of this huge hill in the middle of nowhere is a van which is selling ice cream. We then start our decent down and again we follow along waterfalls. Once at the bottom we have about an hour to kill so were are off to check out the town of Ingelton and have a tea break. After getting back and having supper its time once again for entertainment. As its our last night the entertainment is provided by anyone who wants to do something. Nancy Eleanor and I do our version of "I will follow you" Nancy and I were more the shebop girls in the background. We also had Katy lead us in a Inuit hunting song, we had some folk dancing....not unlike square dancing, one of the guys from Alure ON recited a poem about Alure, Eleanor sang a Rita McNiel song and one of our leaders read the poem about Petey the snake. After several of us stayed up and we had a sing a long as one of the leaders played the piano. It was then followed by what turned out to be a joke off. Don one of the English walkers is one of the funniest guys I have met, he was just rattling off silly funny things, and for every two he came up with Katy had one to match. A perfect ending to a great week.
total miles today was only about 5 miles
Ribblehead Viaduct
close up of the viaduct
walking along the waterfall
more waterfall
more water falls
and yet more waterfalls.....fabulous, wish you could hear the sound of the water
view from the top, the limestone at the top
Petey the snake needs to be shared, so here it is, I would suggest reading it our loud to get the full effect of the story
Petey was a snake, only so big. Petey lived in a pit with his mother. One day Petey was hissing in the pit when his mother said, "Petey, don't hiss in the pit, go outside the pit to hiss." So Petey went outside of the pit to hiss. Petey was hissing all around when he finally leaned over and hissed in the pit. Petey's mother heard Petey hissing in the pit and said, "Petey, if you must hiss in a pit, go over to Mrs. Pott's pit and hiss in her pit. Petey went over to Mrs. Pott's pit to hiss in her pit, but Mrs. Pott was not at home so he hissed in her pit anyway. While Petey was hissing in Mrs. Pott's pit Mrs. Pott came home and found Petey hissing in her pit. She said, "Petey, if you must hiss in a pit, don't hiss in my pit; go to your own pit and hiss." This made Petey very sad, and he cried all the way home. When Petey got home, his mother saw him crying and said, "Petey, what's the matter?" Petey said, "I went over to Mrs. Pott's to hiss in her pit but Mrs. Pott was not at home, so I hissed in her pit anyway. Mrs. Pott came home and found me hissing in her pit and said, "Petey, if you must hiss in a pit go to your own pit and hiss, don't hiss in my pit." This made Petey's mother very angry and she said, "Why that mean old Lady! I knew Mrs. Pott when she didn't have a pit to hiss in."