Monday 15 August 2016

Golden tops: Berkshire and Hampshire

Walbury Hill, Berkshire 297m and Pilot Hill, Hampshire 286m     August 15 2016

Given that I live a mere 10 miles south of these tops it didn't take much thought to drive up to the top of Hampshire helped by the beautiful sunshine. The two county tops are only a couple of miles apart and they share the same "massif". Heading south from Oxfordshire into North Hampshire the land rises from around 160m in the first row of chalk downs. Behind these valleys and downs are the norm until you reach Andover but the first encountered is the biggest. A quirk of county boundary drawing means that the Berkshire top, Walbury Hill is to the NW of Hampshire's top, Pilot Hill. In fact the county boundary straddles the parent "lump" and so it only takes 90 minutes to bag both.

There is a car park between the 2 peaks (much closer to Walbury Hill). From there I turned right and headed roughly westward up an excellent track identified on the OS map as the "Wayfarer's Walk". The chalk and flint path soon crested and I passed through the walls of the ancient hill fort. Just beyond a gate on the left exposed the trig point and a quick stroll across the field meant the top was attained. In reality the ground was a little higher beyond the trig point and I felt I had truly "summited" when I headed beyond.


Retracing my tracks to the car park the route to Pilot Hill was easy to follow. The route initially followed a road ESE and then at a fork in the road a bridleway bisected the fork. This was the worst part; I was wearing shorts and a t-shirt and the abundance of nettles and narrowness of the path caused a little concern. However after 400 m this opened up along a field boundary and very soon a "col" was reached. The views north from here are impressive; the chalk downs rising sharply out of the vale to the north and affords the panoramic views. Birds of prey circled overhead (identification still needed - possibly Red Kites) and just added to the idyllic setting. From this escarpment the track headed SE through a copse and then up to the summit plateau. A large corn field occupies the top of the hill and an uncomfortable stroll through a ripe cornfield with bare legs showed the trig point. However the actual high point seemed to be around 290 m towards the north of the field.


Retracing my route I returned to my car about 90 minutes and 6.6 km after starting. On a warm, sunny summer's day it is a super little walk. Well worth the effort (though minimal!).

The only caution I would offer is that the roads heading to these hills are narrow, windy and with high hedges making progress slow and tedious.

Sunday 14 August 2016

An inauspicious start: Warwickshire's Ebrington Hill


WARWICKSHIRE  EBRINGTON HILL 261m 14 August 2016

An inauspicious start to my quest to bag England’s historic county tops, but I figured that I should start with my home county. Though I have topped a lot of the counties I have never noted them systematically and so this now represents my latest quest.

I was not particularly prepared for this. I had looked this up on my Ipad back in a hotel in Coventry and had a vague idea that it was near the villages of Ebrington and Ilmington. To also help the account talked about transmitters and a trig point. Using the car sat-nav I made it to Ebrington village but this was clearly too low so I headed for higher ground. Eventually I saw an aerial and parked up nearby. I walked towards the mast but couldn’t find the trig point so I figured I had picked the wrong transmitters. I saw two more masts and so trekked along a bridleway for half an hour until I reached them. I assumed (wrongly as it turned out) that this was the hill and that the summit was along the bridleway. However the walk back to the car left an element of doubt in my mind. So I then entered the lat-long coords into the car sat-nav and discovered that my original destination had been correct. I therefore headed back to the location and ended up as close to the summit as possible. I couldn’t find the trig point and the actual summit was in a field of 2m high maize but this will certainly count.

Ebrington Hill is barely in Warwickshire and is right on the Gloucestershire border. The view across the Vale of Evesham (north-west) and north across Warwickshire was superb.

As ascents go this barely deserves the number of words I’ve written, but of this quest it is noteworthy. The first of many!