Peter Truman Photography

Peter Truman Photography

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Tag:peak district

Author: W. A. Poucher
Publisher: Chapman & Hall
Date: 1946
Price: out of print; secondhand prices vary

By modern standards the reproduction of photographs in this book is awful. They are monochrome, grainy and poor in contrast. But then this edition was published in 1946 and mass printing technology was nothing like what we have today!

That said, the black and white images are beautifully composed and to my mind provide a fantastic portrait of the Peak District as it looked over 60 years ago. The images appear very sharp, and very carefully considered and exposed. I am familiar with many of the views in the book and in many cases can see the difference between 1946 and today. The completion of the Derwent Valley reservoirs being a particularly poignant case given the comments in the book - at the time the book was written Derwent Reservoir was not yet full!

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Over the weekend of 13th/14th June the Derbyshire village of Bonsall opened up nearly two dozen of its private gardens for charity. Bonsall is situated at the edge of the Peak District, close to Matlock and Cromford, and stretches from a junction with the A5012 Via Gellia road, up a long and sometimes steep hill to Upper Town which tops out at around 900 feet above sea level providing really excellent views back down into the Derwent Valley.

Across Bonsall from Upper Town

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My daughter Sophie regularly asks me to take her to Curbar Edge for a walk on summer evenings. It ticks all the boxes - it's easy to get to, the walks are as long or short as you like, the views great, lots to see and, if you're a child or still act and play like one, plenty to climb and scramble over.

Curbar Edge makes a spectacular backdrop to the village of Calver just along the A623 road from Baslow towards Buxton. The fields rise gently from the River Derwent and climb steeper and steeper until the exposed millstone grit emerges from the ground nearer the top at about 330m above sea level. A strip of exposed gritstone runs along Curbar Edge from the Curbar road and gap until it joins Froggatt Edge about a mile away to the west. This has created a paradise for climbers who are almost always to be found clambering up the many routes along the edge. To climbers Curbar Edge is known as the "Cloggy of the Peak" as there are so many difficult routes amongst the 280 or so recognised routes along its length.

Curbar Edge

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Since 2005 the Thornbridge Brewery has been brewing award winning ales, the most successful being Jaipur, their India Pale Ale (IPA) which has won plenty of awards and rave reviews. The brewery started life in derelict buildings in the grounds of Thornbridge Hall, a stately home just outside Ashford-in-the-Water in Derbyshire. The brewery's success means that it is moving to larger premises in nearby Bakewell. Today, for the first time, the gardens of the Hall were open as part of the National Gardens Scheme.

Herbaceous Border, Thornbridge Hall

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Author: Fran Halsall
Publisher: Frances Lincoln
Date: 2008
ISBN: 978-0-7112-2828-3

Price: £14.99

Fran Halsall is well known for her landscapes of the Peak District area and this beautifuly illustrated and printed book provides a great collection of her photographs that illustrate the different moods and lighting that make this area what it is. Through the book you can get a great "feel" of the Peak District landscape, what it looks like and what makes it look the way it does.

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Stanage Edge in the Derbyshire Dark Peak

The Peak District National Park doesn't recognise county boundaries and whilst the lion's share is within Derbyshire, Staffordshire and Cheshire also get a small share of the area. It's reach is one of the many factors that makes it popular with visitors and there are estimates that 50% of the UK population live within 50 miles of its borders. That's quite a large number of people, not all of whom have ever visited the area of course, but certainly helps to account for it being very busy on some summer weekends when the sun is shining. It is surrounded by large cities and towns: Derby, Nottingham, Sheffield, Doncaster, Leeds, Halifax, Rochdale, Manchester, Warrington, Stoke, Stafford, Birmingham, Leicester and many others are all within easy reach of the Peak District. It is the UK's first National Park, the highest peak is an accessible 631m above sea level, there's great walking, rock climbing, fishing, cycling, gliding and much more.

If all that sounds exciting, it is, and it makes it a vibrant and a popular place to visit. It is also one of the most beautiful parts of the English landscape with contrasts on a par with the rest of the United Kingdom. Sure, it doesn't have the high mountains of Scotland or the Lake District, but what it doesn't have in height it makes up for in the grandeur and beauty of its dales and valleys. It also has plenty of contrast from the high Dark Peak moorland areas on top of large expanses of millstone grit, some of which is exposed to reveal a strip of rocky edges that traverse the area from north west to east, to the rush of streams and rivers winding their way through the White Peak dales of limestone valleys and gorges.

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Wirksworth is not the first place you would think of when searching Derbyshire for garden delights. It's a small town just outside the Peak District National Park, close to several large limestone quarries and once the centre of the lead mining industry in Derbyshire (now long deserted). It's also an old town with narrow streets and alleyways (colloquially known as "ginnels") that criss-cross the hillside. Gardens and courtyards are often small and hidden well away from the main streets. You could easily have made a big mistake thinking that the gardens here are not worth looking at, but the Wirksworth and Gorsey Bank Open Courtyards and Gardens event held on Saturday and Sunday 11th and 12th July demonstrates.

Looking over Wirksworth from Greenhill

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