The May
issue of Caravan and Motorhome had a short article on Hebden
Bridge with coincided with a canal trip there for a weekend. Maybe
this will be a bit brighter than their offering. I wandered around with my small point and
press camera although often I cannot see easily what is on the screen in bright daylight
so mostly I don’t even look so just point and press.
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David Swanbury
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Going up a lock one has to be careful of strong water flows. Not having a boat that fills the length of a lock I have found the best way for going 'uphill' is as shown. I have an extending paint roller pole with the handle of a paint roller screwed on and a length of the metal of the roller cut off and formed into a more or less right angled hook. I use it to collect the bow rope as the boat comes into the lock and take several turns around a bollard. This allows the pull of the boat to tighten the turns trapping them and preventing the boat banging about in the water flow. It also allows for a quick release if need be as by pulling the tail end of the rope up it unwinds off the bollard. After years of boating on canals I find this works a treat in broad locks and it avoids having to throw ropes up or hang on to a cabin top rope or leave the boat loose to wander about. It also leaves the boat lying happily in a still area with the paddle open on the boat side, and dare I say it, one can confidently open gate paddles more fully sooner. So if you see a bloke with an extending yellow paint roller pole you know why. Without the rope, and it is a good one, this picture would not have been taken.
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David Swanbury
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Tuel Lane Lock, the deepest canal lock in England and Wales at Sowerby Bridge at the beginning of the Rochdale Canal, has to be operated by the lock keeper and any of the Trust volunteers that are in attendance. It replaced two original locks and is approached through a curving spacious tunnel underneath a road junction of the very busy A58. It was originally opened on the 11th April 1996 and we went through it shortly after, before the official opening on the 3rd May.
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David Swanbury
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A foundry casting of a hawk alongside Broadbottom lock before Hebden Bridge.
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David Swanbury
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Alleyway in Hebden Bridge. An old mill and market town with significant water sources which helped its development and which probably also contributed to the last couple of inundations, the last being Boxing Day 2015.
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David Swanbury
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The bluebells were out on the wooded railway embankment.
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David Swanbury
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And the wild garlic made a heady contribution.
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David Swanbury
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David Swanbury
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The original two but I discovered they had gone by a 2014 visit
They disappeared for some reason a few years ago but currently there is a pair of Canada geese with some young and a companion cum minder white one. Further down the canal by Broadbottom lock (LINK to short video) was a white goose with three Canada geese and about 18 assorted small goslings. I don't know if these are part of that group but if so they motored on to get here so quickly.
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David Swanbury
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So now it seems to be this trio in Hebden Bridge. For how long I wonder; but the three adults seem inseparable.
I saw someone's wedding photos a while ago and the photographer thought it very fashionable to have a large selection of his photos taken at angles like this. They did nothing for me, nor the recipient, but this shot was the only way I could grab this image before it was lost. The couple moved quickly past me and joined the conventional looking mother of one or both and were gone. In Hebden Bridge one can wear anything comfortably as it is a bit hippy and informal.
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David Swanbury
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David Swanbury
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David Swanbury
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David Swanbury
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David Swanbury
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David Swanbury
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Hebden Bridge is in an area famed, in the past at any rate, for fustian, which is corduroy. Most woven pile fabrics are made with a special warp forming the pile which is cut across in the weaving process to give the pile. Fustian is made with weft loops cut so that a rib of pile runs the length of the cloth. After weaving with specific weft loops the fabric is sent to a specialist fustian cutter that uses long needle like knives to slide down the rows of weft loops to cut them. This thing in the centre of St George's Square is a scaled up image of a fustian knife end-
Sundial, with the gnomon in the shape of a fustian cutters knife or needle.
The one-tonne sculpture of a "fustian knife" was unveiled on the Summer Solstice by the Mayor of Calderdale, Cllr. Conrad Winterburn and the Mayor of Hebden Royd, Cllr. Susan Press.
Fustian knives were used in the manufacture of corduroy, a fabric for which Hebden Bridge was known throughout the world.
This large scale replica of a Fustian knife points directly north towards Nutclough Mill, former home of Hebden Bridge Fustian Manufacturing Society Ltd, founded in 1870. Pecket Well mill was the last mill in Britain to manufacture corduroy fustian cloth ( 1858 – 1989 ). ref LINK
See more about fustian? - LINK
They are into things like summer solstices in Hebden Bridge.
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David Swanbury
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David Swanbury
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And some enticing produce.
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David Swanbury
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David Swanbury
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Cheese specialist.
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David Swanbury
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The enticing smell stall but only bhaji on show.
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David Swanbury
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David Swanbury
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David Swanbury
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Sunday lunch. I wonder if I was noticed?
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David Swanbury
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David Swanbury
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David Swanbury
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David Swanbury
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David Swanbury
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An early morning start by an old boat with a rather worn out diesel engine.
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David Swanbury
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David Swanbury
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David Swanbury
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The geese seemed to spend the nights on the bank behind the boat.
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David Swanbury
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A house on the canal bridge at Mytholmroyd
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David Swanbury
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