This is another four mile walk, six kilometers or so.
Starting at Whitby Abbey, this took us along the coastal path to a camp site, then cross country, back into Whitby from the top.
Not a particularly difficult walk, but enough to work up an appetite for fish 'n' chips afterwards!
(Click 'em to see 'em.)
On our way to Whitby, we stopped off at the Hole Of Horcum, near Fylingdales. The story is, that a giant created the huge crater in the Moors, when he got so pissed off with his wife, grabbed a lump of land, and threw it at her!
He missed apparently, and created another Moors landmark, the name of which escapes me now.
Bram Stoker wrote about Whitby;
"The houses of the old town are all red-roofed, and seem piled up one over the other anyhow,"
"The houses of the old town are all red-roofed, and seem piled up one over the other anyhow,"
I used to love this bridge when I was a child. I remember the old dredger passing through it several times a day, cleaning the seabed.
I have to admit, I love Whitby. It just oozes gothic character, and it really isn't difficult to understand why Bram Stoker found so much inspiration in Whitby for his classic novel.
1 comment:
in such place anyone can wake up they horror instinct, is not strange in place like this Bram Stoker found the elements to write that magnificent novel.
Post a Comment