A note from the administrator.
I have had to close the forum to new members. Registration is shut. I'm sorry for it - but I can no longer vouch for who comes through the door.
You may also find that certain older topics are no longer where you left them. I have, with great reluctance, removed a small number of threads and posts from this forum. I did so at the written request of a firm of solicitors acting for the landowner, who hold that the material touched on matters they would prefer were not aired in public.
I have complied, because I am one man and they are not. I want it set down plainly, here, that I did so under protest, and that I do not accept the grounds. Nothing removed was untrue. Nothing removed was anyone's business to suppress.
But I will not delete this board. What is left here stays, and you may read it for as long as I can keep the lights on. I have locked the doors; I have not burned the house. I have kept copies of everything. I would ask, gently, that those of you who hold anything of your own do the same.
E. Selwood
I have had to close the forum to new members. Registration is shut. I'm sorry for it - but I can no longer vouch for who comes through the door.
You may also find that certain older topics are no longer where you left them. I have, with great reluctance, removed a small number of threads and posts from this forum. I did so at the written request of a firm of solicitors acting for the landowner, who hold that the material touched on matters they would prefer were not aired in public.
I have complied, because I am one man and they are not. I want it set down plainly, here, that I did so under protest, and that I do not accept the grounds. Nothing removed was untrue. Nothing removed was anyone's business to suppress.
But I will not delete this board. What is left here stays, and you may read it for as long as I can keep the lights on. I have locked the doors; I have not burned the house. I have kept copies of everything. I would ask, gently, that those of you who hold anything of your own do the same.
E. Selwood
Holloways - the sunken lanes to nowhere
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geocache_gaz
- Posts: 14
- Joined: Sat Jun 24, 2017 10:10 pm
Holloways - the sunken lanes to nowhere
been thinking about these since the lidar thread. holloways, the really deep sunken lanes, worn down below the fields by centuries of feet and carts and water. theres one near me thats twenty foot deep in places, trees meeting overhead, proper green tunnel, and it just stops. dead ends in a field. where was it GOING? roads dont sink themselves into the ground going nowhere.
400+ caches and counting. if its hidden ill find it
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RevdMargaretA
- Posts: 13
- Joined: Sat Feb 18, 2012 5:34 pm
It was going somewhere, Gary; the somewhere is what has gone. A holloway that ends in an empty field is very often the road to a place that is no longer there, a farm, a hamlet, a mill, a chapel. The lane outlasts what it led to, because a deep holloway takes centuries to wear and longer to fill. You are looking at the ghost of a journey people stopped making. Follow its line on the old maps and you will usually find a name at the far end, even if there is nothing else.
The land is full of the memory of those who walked it.
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geocache_gaz
- Posts: 14
- Joined: Sat Jun 24, 2017 10:10 pm
thats a lovely and slightly sad way of putting it Mrs A. the ghost of a journey people stopped making. checked the old map and theres a Chapel Field marked right where it dead ends. so there WAS something there once. going back with the camera saturday.
400+ caches and counting. if its hidden ill find it
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Marlborough_Nan
- Posts: 41
- Joined: Sat Sep 01, 2012 6:59 am
Funny, my father called them the old ways, and would never let us play down the deep one near us when we were children. Said you could lose the day in it. I thought he meant get lost, but I think now he meant something else, that time went queer down there, all that green and quiet and the world up above going on without you. Children feel that sort of thing. He wasnt wrong.
just an old woman who remembers when the green had three shops.