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Saturday, March 24th, it was sunny when we woke up so a spur of the moment decision was made: lets explore our previous walk a little more, and walk the correct way. We hurried ourselves to shower, pack and leave as soon as possible and were out the door at 11.05am. We headed our usual way to Latchbrook, though didn’t stop with any distractions as we usual do, and went straight to the steep stairway that was the beginning of the public footpath we found.

At the top of the very first hill, conditions were almost perfect for photography. The colours were vibrant, and the sky was blue, so we stopped around this area for quite some time to take photos of an old shed (I’m guessing), which was rusted, adding a lovely red to the scene. We headed a little further in to the top of the field where the first gate and stile was, stopping once again to take photos of the gate, and a small bird hopping around in the trees, which I couldn’t quite make out.

While at the gate, we took the time to take some photos of each other, and together. As always, they didn’t turn out quite how we wanted so no one will get to see us together from that day, except ourselves. After a bit of frustration, we walked through the second field, again taking photos of the next gate and stile, before climbing over. This was the gate in the previous post that we didn’t take notice of and therefore headed in the wrong direction. This time we did, and headed over to another gate, then up the field a bit (it was the wrong gate) to the corner diagonally to the first. While in this field, we stopped again for some photography. Zeta snapped around and I managed to get a fairly okay panorama, with a total of 8 photos, showing the country side and a bit of Saltash. Nothing spectacular though.

Old Shed Gate One Small Cow

Picture 1: The old shed that added a rich red to the scene (Nyssa)
Picture 2: The first gate and stile, with a bare tree right next to it (Nyssa)
Picture 3: The first laneway we walked down between two fields (Nyssa)
Picture 4: One of the first cows we saw on the day (Nyssa)

We continued on to the right gate, climbing over the stile once again, and into a cow field. The cows simply looked at us and ignored us for the most part. We got some photos of them, Zeta getting a video as well, right at the time one of the cows was having it’s toilet break lol. We moved on, coming to a crossing, I guess you would call it, where a few of the fields intersected. This was obviously where the cows moved from field to field, as it was extremely muddy. I’m guessing the mud was probably well over ankle deep in the middle. We skirted around the side of this, stopping for a moment so Zeta could take some photos of a deep road cut into the mud by a tractor of some sort and then continued to a lane that was a line of trees and wall on both sides, straight down between two fields. It was quite a peaceful walk.

At the end of the lane, we came to a sort of cross-road, if you wish. We could go in 3 directions: left (route 3), right (route two) or straight ahead (route one). We decided to go straight ahead. It was a small area with a body of water, lots of trees and plants of other kinds, and a bridge that went over some of the shallower water. We went to the other side, taking photos of an old tree in the water. Zeta got another video here, and then we decided we’d take a seat and eat lunch (packed sandwiches we purchased on the way at Spar). We sat on the bridge in the sunshine and ate. During our after lunch snack (crisps, or chips for those in Australia), Zeta spotted a butterfly which kept landing on the bridge. She got down on her hands and knees, and moved slowly towards it, then onto her stomach to get some macros of it. I tried to do the same, but it flew away almost instantly, landing on a plant nearby, where I got a couple of photos. We later identified this butterfly as the Peacock butterfly.

Tree Peacock Butterfly Horse Cows

Picture 1: The old tree reflecting in the water near where we ate lunch (Nyssa)
Picture 2: A peacock butterfly we managed to get a couple of photos of (Nyssa)
Picture 3: The friendly horse we fed (Zeta)
Picture 4: A large field of cows, lazing about, not minding our intrusion (Zeta)

After lunch, we went over to the next stile, which was a horse paddock. There were two horses. Zeta was first to climb over and walked into the field a little, until one of the horses started walking towards her, then making noises, scaring Zeta a little. She walked back to the stile and climbed back over, assuming the horse didn’t want to let us pass. Eventually, the horse came over to us, and let us pet her (assuming it was a her, that is). We noticed she was eating a plant that wasn’t in her field, but there wasn’t much, so we went off and found some for her, feeding her by hand. She was actually quite a friendly horse.

We took some photos, some videos and then decided we’d head off the other way (the right path) rather than attempting to go through the field with the horses. We followed the small bridge back to the other side and followed another path, which more or less lead to no where, so we came back and went to the last path we could take. First off, it was into a cow field again. A lot of cows here, and a lot of perfect opportunities for photography. We spent a fair amount of time, composing photos of the cows and the landscape surrounding them, eventually moving on over the next stile and into another lane like the previous, following it right to the end, where there was a very small stream and a bridge to cross. Naturally, we followed the bridge, and up through another gate, which again, lead into another field.

Bridge and stream Farmland Farmland 2 Tree

Picture 1: The small stream and a glimpse of the bridge that crossed it (Nyssa)
Picture 2 & 3: Some farmland and hedges that separate the different fields (Zeta)
Picture 4: A bare tree within the hedge line (Zeta)

We followed in the direction the arrow pointed, which came to a stile and gate. Unfortunately, this one had no arrow, so we just assumed to go straight ahead. We came do a dead end, so we followed around the edge of the field (after taking some photos of the beautiful view, of course) looking for our next stile and/or gate, not finding it. Unfortunately, at this point, we had both used all of our memory. One gigabyte worth of photos each. It was also getting fairly cold, and late, so we thought we’d just head back the way we came and get home. We walked on home the same way.

Walk Information

Start time: 11.05am
End time: 4.50pm
Distance covered: 6.13 kilometres / 3.80 miles | View walk map
Type of walk: Public footpath

Summary

March 11, 2007 by Nyssa in Saltash, Forder, Plymouth, Latchbrook, Cornwall, Devon
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Saturday 3rd March, the weather was quite good so we walked into Saltash for lunch (pasties) then continuing down to Lower Fore Street, where we finished our pasties and then went for a walk halfway across the Tamar Bridge, then back again. We then went down to Saltash waterfront to sit with the swans and pigeons for a little while, before deciding to head back home.
Pigeon Swan Royal Albert Bridge Tamar Bridge

Picture 1: A pigeon… (Nyssa)
Picture 2: …and mute swan at Saltash waterfront (Nyssa)
Picture 3: View of the Royal Albert Bridge, taken from the Tamar Bridge (Zeta)
Picture 4:
A section of the Tamar Bridge from the waterfront (Zeta)

Tuesday 6th March, the weather was good again so we walked to Forder for some photography. We set out after lunch, the first part of the walk was mostly road walking. Once we got to Forder, we looked for some ducks to feed, but only found two, which weren’t all that interested, so we continued walking across a grassy field. Here we saw some birds flying around, which were probably buzzards. There were about 5 of them all together in the sky, flying around and calling. We continued walking over the grass to a small trail in the trees. We walked through to the end, took some photographs and decided to head back to the other side of Forder Creek, where the sun was shining. The trail on this side of the creek much longer than the one on the other side, so we killed a lot of time walking through here. The trail was muddy, but gorgeous none the less. We followed this right out into a clearing where we got an amazing view of the Forder Railway Viaduct. This was more towards the bottom of the hill, so we walked to the top, where the view all around was even more amazing. Up here, we took some photographs again, even though the conditions weren’t great for it, and even saw a rabbit. Eventually, we headed back down the trail towards Forder. As we neared, we saw a single Cormorant sitting on a boat, which made for a good photo opportunity. As it was getting late, we just headed straight home.
Cormorant Trematon Castle Forder Creek Field

Picture 1: A single cormorant resting on a boat (Nyssa)
Picture 2: Trematon Castle, a 12th century shell keep (Nyssa)
Picture 3: Boats resting on the shore while the tide was out at Forder (Zeta)
Picture 4: View from on top of the hill (Zeta)

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Out & About UK is an adventure (b)log of a Brit (Zeta) and an Aussie (Nyssa), sharing their experiences and adventures in the UK.

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