21.10.24 Hoof Stones Height (SD 914 290)
Having visited Thieveley
Pike (SD 871 271) we now headed north-eastward, with John driving and
navigating the way to the county boundary between Lancashire and Yorkshire,
where a convenient parking spot on a minor road gave access to our second hill
of the day; Hoof Stones Height. This
hill was not on the original bagging agenda, as Mark had previously visited,
but this is where we found ourselves and it proved a fine hill to visit.
|
Heading for the hill |
The minor road was to
the south of the summit with a boggy path leading northward from the confines
of the moor, which was bisected by the narrow strip of tarmac as it headed
southward toward the Calder valley.
By now the sun glinted
through high cloud, giving tranquility to the scene, which the lessening of
breeze only emphasised. Beside the bog
laden path heather predominated, which was at contrast to our first hill of
the afternoon. The grasses of the moor,
with their bronzed tips cast gentle colour in the late afternoon light. It felt good to be out on the hill.
|
Mark on the large boulders near the path |
Our route up the hill led
toward large boulders, which were just to the east of the path. Mark went to investigate, whilst John and I
continued our plod uphill through increasing bog.
|
The open moor |
I looked back as Mark
rejoined the path, the moorland surrounds stretched for miles. With rough grass, heather and no doubt more
bog disappearing in to the distance. The
majority of which seemed unenclosed, with few fences hereabouts.
|
John beside the trig pillar |
It was now only a short
distance to the trig pillar, which forlornly stood beside a puddled bog. We debated the high point, with John
indicating a grassy knoll a few metres away to be the summit. The Trimble was soon placed on top of it
gathering data. This proved a delightful
top, with weathered rock under the highest grassed patch of earth.
|
Gathering data at the summit of Hoof Stones Height |
As the Trimble gathered
its customary five minutes of data, I stood with Mark and John a suitable
distance away from the equipment so as not to interfere with satellite
reception, scribbling all necessary detail in my surveying note book, before scampering
back to the equipment to turn it off, take a few photographs, pack it away and
rejoin my colleagues for our downward route.
|
Heading down the hill |
I followed John down,
with Mark behind. The late afternoon
autumnal light, with delicately blue hued silvered cloud stretching across the
horizon as the sun sank deeper in the sky proved a fine end to a gentle, albeit
boggy afternoon on the hill.
Survey Result:
Hoof
Stones Height
Summit Height: 479.3m (converted to OSGM15, Trimble GeoXH
6000)
Summit Grid Reference: SD 91475 29092 (Trimble GeoXH 6000)
Col Height: 379.7m (LIDAR)
Col Grid Reference: SD 91128 31461 (LIDAR)
Drop: 99.6m (Trimble GeoXH 6000 summit and LIDAR
col)
Dominance: 20.79% (Trimble GeoXH 6000 summit and LIDAR
col)
For further details please consult the Trimble Survey Spreadsheet