Paths, coastal and otherwise
Nov. 10th, 2010 10:39 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
The Marine and Coastal Access Act 2009 provides for a path all around the coast of England (more information on the Ramblers' web site) - but first a route has to be defined, and
durham_rambler is involved in a pilot scheme to look at where the path might go along part of the Sunderland and Durham coastline. This will inevitably involve meetings and training and proper survey forms - but since the weather forecast for Saturday was unsettled, Sunderland seemed like a good place to go walking, and we thought we'd construct a circular walk which would include a stretch where we anticipated problems.
In fact the hardest part was finding the marked car park which we had indentified on the map as a good point to start: surely it would be signposted from the through road, surely it couldn't involve plunging into that sinister-looking gap under the railway in this waste of derelict industry? But no it wasn't, and yes it could, and once we realised that however unlikely, that had to be our route, we found ourselves on a stretch of promenade hard up against Hendon Docks. Fences and razor wire and huge containers of who knows what indicate that here, for once, industry is not derelict, and runs right down to the sea. I don't know how the Coastal Path will get round this one.
We didn't even try, but turned inland, and walked a wide loop through the streets and parks of the city to bring us back to the coast. This was more road work than is ideal, but more fun than it sounds. Quite apart from the tattoo parlours of Hendon, it was autumn in Backhouse Park:
From here it was a steep climb up through suburban streets, round Sainsbury's, where we picked up a cycle route onto the recreation grounds at Silksworth, skirting ponds full of waterfowl and passing the Ski slope (it's amazing what you can do with an unwanted coal mine). At the far end we joined the disused railway which brought us past the Tunstall Hills nature reserve (to visit another day) all the way to Ryhope.
Since our last visit. a new road has been built here parallel to the coast, and we were initially a bit deterred by the many colourful signs saying 'keep out - no access to the beach - go away'. But we worked out that 'no access to beach' did not mean that we couldn't turn short of the beach and walk the footpath along the cliffs, so that's what we did, and came back to Hendon as the sun was setting:
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In fact the hardest part was finding the marked car park which we had indentified on the map as a good point to start: surely it would be signposted from the through road, surely it couldn't involve plunging into that sinister-looking gap under the railway in this waste of derelict industry? But no it wasn't, and yes it could, and once we realised that however unlikely, that had to be our route, we found ourselves on a stretch of promenade hard up against Hendon Docks. Fences and razor wire and huge containers of who knows what indicate that here, for once, industry is not derelict, and runs right down to the sea. I don't know how the Coastal Path will get round this one.
We didn't even try, but turned inland, and walked a wide loop through the streets and parks of the city to bring us back to the coast. This was more road work than is ideal, but more fun than it sounds. Quite apart from the tattoo parlours of Hendon, it was autumn in Backhouse Park:
From here it was a steep climb up through suburban streets, round Sainsbury's, where we picked up a cycle route onto the recreation grounds at Silksworth, skirting ponds full of waterfowl and passing the Ski slope (it's amazing what you can do with an unwanted coal mine). At the far end we joined the disused railway which brought us past the Tunstall Hills nature reserve (to visit another day) all the way to Ryhope.
Since our last visit. a new road has been built here parallel to the coast, and we were initially a bit deterred by the many colourful signs saying 'keep out - no access to the beach - go away'. But we worked out that 'no access to beach' did not mean that we couldn't turn short of the beach and walk the footpath along the cliffs, so that's what we did, and came back to Hendon as the sun was setting:
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