Sunday 13 September 2009

My 4th Published Waymark - Greenway Bank

Cut Bench Mark - Greenway Bank Country Park
WM775Z
Me with the CBM
Knypersley Pool

Monday 7 September 2009

My 3rd Published Waymark

Rudyard Lake Steam Railway
WM75QE
The waymarks are coming thick and fast now that I'm getting used to figuring out what each of the categories wants. The hardest one for this waymark was figuring out which category I should place it in as there doesn't seem to be anything for steam railways.
Rudyard Lake Steam Railway is one of my favourite places and I have been visiting it for years. I used to work just up the road when I was a teenager as a waitress. The pub has now been turned into luxury apartments and I have to admit the building is lovely.
I really enjoy visiting the lake as well and best of all there have been quite a few geocaches published lately, so hopefully my waymark will get a few visits too.

Sunday 6 September 2009

My 2nd Published Waymark- Hawksmoor

Hawksmoor National Trust Reserve
 WM75QB

My second waymark has just been published. As I am journeying around the countryside bagging caches, I see more and more things that would be of interest to others. So I've decided to start getting them published on waymarking.com so that I can share some of the more obscure places that can be visited. Hawksmoor is a lovely place which I had never visited before even though I used to live quite close by. I would imagine that all the people visiting this area would just bypass this on their way to Alton Towers and not even know it existed.

Hawksmoor is a lovely place located in a steep wooded valley and 3-4 miles walks are marked via local websites.

Tuesday 1 September 2009

My first published Waymark

St Catherine's Church
known locally as Lydiate Abbey
WM74DD



We visited this whilst caching in Lancashire and thought it was such a lovely place it was a shame that it was not a waymark as well. I came home and checked waymarking.com and sure enough it wasn't there so armed with all the information which I had collected I set about making sure that this was published.

My first attempt was rejected as I had used the wrong category for the church so had to resubmit this into the Medieval Church category. Only 8 hours later the WM was published.

St Catherine's Church is also known as Lydiate Abbey. It is believed to have been built c1500 and abandoned about 50 years later. Only the ruins of the abbey exist today.It is 1 of only 2 surviving private chapels in South West Lancashire and it is now a grade II listed building and scheduled monument and is included in the Lydiate Hall and Chapel Conservation area.
Lydiate Abbey was built for the private worship of the Ireland family, Lords of the Manor of Lydiate from c1410 - 1673

Initials of Lawrence Ireland and his wife, Catherine Blundell can be found on the porch of the abbey. Ireland Family were very influential in the area in the 15th century and Lydiate Hall was built sometime around 1470. The eastern part of the Hall was destroyed about 1780, and the Hall was abandoned completely by the late 1800s. Only ruins exist today.

The abbey appears to have been abandoned when the practice of the Catholic religion was prohibited. Local legend holds that a tunnel exists between the Abbey and the Hall to allow the escape of a priest. Another local legend states that the tunnel was between the Abbey and the Scotch Piper pub (now a grade 2 listed building)in order to allow monks to escape the public house. However, there is no documented evidence of this. The adjacent graveyard was used by local Catholic families into the later 1800s.