• Ant Travels

Robin Hood way

A walk tracing some of Robin Hood’s history.A long distance path of 107 miles in Nottinghamshire which meanders between Nottingham and Edwinstowe and which explores locations associated with the legendary outlaw and his exploits. En savoir plus
  • Début du voyage
    1 septembre 2025

    Hemlock Stone to Bestwood village

    1 septembre, Angleterre ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

    I’ve adapted the walk a bit …only 4 days available so a walk and a bit of bus!

    After yesterday’s football debacle , the sun and the rain showers I’m hoping it’s better today.

    The first stage has been omitted as it’s very familiar … Nottingham castle to Wollaton Hall, and I’m starting at the Hemlock Stone - after negotiating the local buses from Donnington and East Midlands Airport !

    I was introduced to the odd stone 50 years ago on a university trip- it’s odd isolated and 31 ft high made of red sandstone capped by harder pebbly stone! It has a strange back story …druids, religious rites , especially the cult of fire and sun worship ! Our prof said it was a stone thrown by the devil at Lenton Abbey - it missed ! Of course he was right!
    Stapleford hill provides from its trig point and you can see three counties and the old Nottingham canal !
    These trips are never without those lost moments - today was one overshoot and two misdirections !
    Finally on the right direction it’s via Trowell and old church with old city clock and then on to Strelley with quaint hall and impressive church with carvings.
    We’re also on the Monks Way which has some large stones that traced an old route to monasteries …and some amazing walls too .

    There’s a big section of countryside and fields and skylines on the way to Kimberley.
    My guide book suggests I cross a busy by pass! Or have I lost my way again ?
    Kimberley is an old industrial village only since 1816 and its most famous product ? Beer …ale …. And the old brewery building fills the skyline !
    It’s lunchtime so beer …lucky for me it decided to throw it down whilst on the Hardy Hanson pub complete with locals discussing the football and the building!
    After the pub I adapt the walk via Greasley and over to Hucknall which after a long lane and countryside emerges into one of the largest new housing estates being constructed ! A lot of nice houses !
    After navigating through them I reach my hostelry for the evening !
    16 miles or so - bath !
    En savoir plus

  • Bestwood, Newstead Abbey to Worksop

    2 septembre, Angleterre ⋅ ☁️ 18 °C

    Another wander on and off the path

    First to Bestwood Country Park is on the north edge of Nottingham it is originally part of Sherwood Forest. 
    In the Victorian era, the Bestwood Coal and Iron Company to mine coal at Bestwood colliery. It had a huge impact on the local community and claims to be the world’s first mine to produce one million tonnes of coal in a single year. 
    The Winding House, which stands prominently at the entrance to the park is an impressive and unusual feature of the park.  It was used to lower the miners into the into the shaft and winch the coal back to the surface when it was operational.
    The main lodge is now a hotel and does have statues of the outlaws outside the building.
    The Alexandra lodge to the big house is impressive too
    The sun is shining !
    Off north I visit St James’ church, in Papplewick. It lies
    to the west of the village, on a secluded site close to the river Leen. The church is thought to have been built in the 12th century after a grant made by Henry II to Newstead Priory.
    Legend has it that Alan A’Dale, one of Robin Hood’s men, was married here.
    In the porch, there are carved figures above the door. The one immediately above the door is late Saxon or early Norman probably representing St. James. The higher figure used to be set high up on the inner side of the archway, but it is uncertain whom it depicts.
    In the Churchyard stands the magnificent yew which is about 350 years old.

    Cross country and to the old industrial relic of Papplewick pumping station of 1883. Originally designed to pump water from the porous sandstone it’s not longer functional but still impressive- more so when on special days when the James Watt beam engine is active - not today !

    Travelling north via a bus I reach Blidworth, a mining town with hill fortress and barrows. It’s the heart of old Sherwood Forest and supposedly where Maid Marion came from !
    st Mary’s church here on the edge of town has a massive old tower ! The church is locked and my search for the supposed grave if Will Scarlet naturally proves fruitless!
    After not finding the grave I decide to search the local pub for Lunch

    Added news from later!

    Blidworth's 15th-century Church of St. Mary of the Purification replaced an earlier Norman church or monastery.

    It’s probable that Scarlet’s grave is constructed from parts of this earlier structure, though when these architectural relics were assembled into their current squat monumental form and why they became associated with the mortal remains of one of Robin Hood’s henchmen is unknown.
    Even if Scarlet existed and was buried in Blidworth, these 600-year-old fragments would have to be to be a later addition to his grave, as the bulk of the Robin Hood legends are set in the 13th century.

    Scarlet’s Grave isn’t the only link Blidworth has with the Robin Hood legends. Maid Marian supposedly lived in a cottage opposite the church and was escorted to her wedding with Robin at nearby Edwinstowe by Scarlet himself.

    A real-life Robin Hood-esque event, contemporary with the legends, did occur in the village and could have inspired Blidworth's myths of merry outlaws. In 1276, two archers were caught poaching in Sherwood Forest and imprisoned in the village. As they awaited sentencing by the Sheriff of Nottingham, they met an organized gang of 20 archers and swordsmen, who assaulted the guards and freed the poachers. The identity of this real-life band of 13th-century Sherwood outlaws is not known.

    Back west to Newstead abbey home to Byron ! It was formerly an Augustinian priory and converted to a domestic home following the Dissolution of the Monasteries, and it is now best known as the ancestral home of Lord Byron. It has a moody lake too!

    The end of the day proves a drag . The buses work fine but the train suffers from some “passenger disruption.” And is 15 minutes late and then taken out of service completely ! Another half hour wait before another train and some time before I get my boots off!
    En savoir plus

  • Creswell Crags to Edwinstowe

    3 septembre, Angleterre ⋅ 🌧 19 °C

    After an entertaining dinner where the guy behind me spent the evening explaining to his wife ( I think) what she should do with regard to friends, parents , money , red wine …you name it , he knew the right thing to do with “no axe to grind luv!”

    A good nights sleep and the anticipated downpour and thunder has not materialised and it’s just mist and a bit of drizzle !

    Creswell Crags is an enclosed limestone gorge and The cliffs in the ravine contain several caves that were occupied during the last ice age, between around 43,000 and 10,000 years ago. The caves contain the northernmost cave art in Europe.
    The caves were seasonally occupied by nomadic groups of people during the Upper Palaeolithic and Mesolithic periods. Evidence of Neolithic, Bronze Age, Roman and post-medieval activity has also been found there. There is evidence of Neanderthal-occupation 50,000–60,000 years ago.
    I took a moody walk around before the centre opened!

    Then a 12 mile hike cross country and through woodland and forest !

    Eventually I reach the Major Oak - a mighty English Oak that people have wondered about and whether Robin Hood and his outlaws did hide within the trunk to escape the clutches of the Sheriff of Nottingham, as the legends suggest.
    It is arguably the best known and certainly one of the biggest Oak trees in Britain, with a canopy spread of 28 metres, a trunk circumference of 11 metres and an estimated weight of 23 tonnes.

    Today, however, its health is struggling. In 2025, its crown has produced fewer leaves than at any time in recent memory.

    Sherwood Forest consists of the remnants of an ancient Royal Forest . It was proclaimed by William the Conqueror and mentioned in the Domesday Book in 1086. The reserve has the highest concentration of ancient trees in Europe.

    Today, Sherwood Forest National Nature Reserve encompasses 424.75 hectares (1,049.6 acres),[4] surrounding the village of Edwinstowe. The reserve contains more than a thousand ancient oaks which are known to be more than 500 years old, with the Major Oak being twice that age. Sherwood Forest is within an area which used to be called "Birch Lund", which is Viking in origin, now known as Birklands.
    Once an area of woodland and heathland stretching over 30 miles from Nottingham to Worksop, Sherwood Forest was established as a royal hunting preserve in the 10th century.

    Made legendary as the home of the famous outlaw in the ballads of Robin Hood,
    Revived by the Normans, the forest was enjoyed by successive kings and the link to royalty continued as parts of the forest were acquired by nobility and four main ducal estates developed. This unique area, known as The Dukeries, contains the estates of Clumber, Welbeck, Thoresby and Worksop.

    It’s a short walk to Edwinstowe village .

    St Mary's Church is a parish church in Edwinstowe.
    Edwin of Northumbria, King and Saint, was killed in the Battle of Hatfield Chase against his rival King Penda of Mercia. His body was buried in the forest, by the time his friends came to collect him to take him to be buried in York in 633, a small wooden chapel had been erected. This chapel became St Mary’s Church .The name of the village arrived from King Edwin.

    It is the church where, according to legend, Robin Hood and Maid Marian were married.

    Inside I’m greeted by a steward who unfolds the history including secret face in the east window dating from 1864 and chantry altar slab saved from Henry VIII’s clutches! He also explains where Will Scarlets grave was ! And where Marion is buried - Dunmow in Essex!

    Think it’s time for a beer to celebrate ! ( Well it is the end of the trail …but I of course have cherrypicked parts !)

    12 miles today … lots of forest !

    Tomorrow a bit more
    En savoir plus

  • Eakring to Southwell

    4 septembre, Angleterre ⋅ 🌧 15 °C

    So plans changed !
    I realised that Wellow was close so I went to see their maypole after 50 yrs - a previous trip out with Catherine ,my University lecturer ! Actually it’s why I’m visiting Eakring which was discussed was when we visited Laxton , the last remaining Open field system!

    Eakring is a pleasant village with an odd history!
    For centuries it was an "Open Field" village and its can be seen when approaching Eakring from either east or west, where two of the three large fields can be seen . It was only in the Second World War that the last remaining strips in these fields finally disappeared from use.
    
At the same time there was a new addition to the village -the arrival of the "Nodding Donkeys", when oil was discovered under the village just before the war . Extraction of oil at this crucial time was speeded up by some Oklahoma oilmen, whose visit was kept a closely guarded secret. Oil production only ceased in 1966, but a small oilfield museum remains in Duke's Wood on the Kirklington side of the village, and site of earlier oil extraction.
    It explains why The Training Centre of National Grid Transco now occupies the site of the first discovered oil well !

    https://www.nottinghampost.com/news/local-news/…
    
Just to the west of the village, along a farmer's track and the Robin Hood Way, is Mompesson's Cross at Pulpit Ash. This marks the spot where, in the 1670s, William Mompesson, the newly arrived rector, preached to his flock. He had come from the plague-sticken village of Eyam in the Peak District, where he had witnessed the death of the population that included his wife. Credited with having prevented the spread of the infection to neighbouring villages he has ever since been considered the "Hero of the Plague". During the epidemic he abandoned the church and preached in an open area in an attempt to avoid the spread of infection. Whatever the real reason, there is no doubt that he used an open-air pulpit at that spot for a time. He rests beneath the little parish church.

    The parish church is dedicated to St Andrew. The building was constructed in the 13th–15th centuries .It contains a font bearing the date 1674, and a plaque commemorating the installation of the tower clock in 1887.

    I pass through Kirklington
    and head to Southwell - its pronunciation varies and there are two schools of thought - South Well or Suthell! ?

    The Southwell Workhouse was built in 1824 as a place of last resort for the destitute. Its architecture was influenced by prison design and its harsh regime became a blueprint for workhouses throughout the country.

    The name 'South Well' is first recorded in the charter 956AD, but Southwell was already an ancient place - a Roman villa has been found to the east of The Minster, and it’s possible that this is why the site was chosen for an important church.

    Many of the town's most interesting buildings are the 'prebendal' houses, for supporting the priests who helped in the running of the Minister.
    Southwell also became an important market centre during medieval times, and the street patterns of that era still exist around King Street.

    Southwell Minster, is strictly since 1884 actually Southwell Cathedral, and formally the Cathedral and Parish Church of the Blessed Virgin Mary.

    The current church is the successor to one built in 956 by Oscytel, Archbishop of York. Some eleventh century aspects survive but the majority dates from between 1108 and 1150, when it was reconstructed in the Romanesque style.
    The chancel was rebuilt from 1234 to 1251 in the Early English Gothic style.
    In 1288 the chapter house was built and it is decorated with carved foliage of quality. The minster's rood screen is also impressive!

    The church was collegiate from its foundation until 1841, although it was twice dissolved and re-founded during the English Reformation.

    Southwell is where Charles I surrendered to Scottish troops in 1646 during the English Civil War. The fighting saw the church seriously damaged and the nave used as stabling. The adjoining palace was almost completely destroyed .

    The nave, transepts, central tower and two western towers of the Norman church which replaced the Anglo-Saxon minster remain as an amazing Romanesque design.

    Today in the Minster ,however, appears to be a special day as there is strange almost Bayeaux tapestry like event ! It’s knitted scenes of WW2 ! The longest yarn has drawn the crowds after a tv link last night! It’s pretty weird but strangely interesting ! I glance at it and avoid the crowds and then get my personal tour of the minster as no one is asking her today about the minster! All the blurb which is very interesting - ornate carvings old and new - there are lot of the mouse man’s woodwork all over the altar area!

    https://www.southwellminster.org/events/event/t…

    Picked up by Harry Haz old uni pal and a lunch chatting over strange times with him
    and Martina ! Great lunch ! Great chat !

    A train back to Loughborough and I’m done

    And that’s it ! A walk about someone who probably didn’t exist or was several stories rolled together !

    Robin Hood ? Who was he ?
    Errol Flynn? Sean Connery ?
    Kevin Costner ? Russell Crowe?
    No it was Richard Greene!

    It struck me I’ve never heard of a classic book about his legend !
    Strangely the most famous and classicversion of the Robin Hood story is Howard Pyle's The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood, first published in 1883. While there are many retellings, Pyle's book, with his own superb illustrations and pseudo-medieval style, is considered a definitive version of the legendary outlaw- at least for kids !
    I must dig it out !
    En savoir plus

    Fin du voyage
    4 septembre 2025