Audlem locks |
Although the canal, and particularly the flight of locks, were an attraction, we chose Audlem primarily as base for cycling - it being at the hub of a network of quiet roads radiating in all directions from the village. Not that we ignored the canal, of course. Indeed on our first afternoon after arriving we took a walk up and down the flight, closing a few gates for boaters and dropping paddles for a solo boater who appeared to have "forgotten" his when leaving the lock.
Afterwards, finding ourselves outside the "Shroppie Fly" we treated ourselves to our first pints of draught beer in a pub since March. I have to say that it was a surprisingly normal experience. Apart from the barmaid wearing a face visor, we just ordered at the bar, paid in cash and took our drinks to an outdoor table. Naturally, I didn't even find it strange that an attractive young woman in a pub was asking me for my name and phone number (although she hasn't called me yet!).
But the main focus of the week was cycling. Even the two A roads that meet in the village square were lightly trafficked and they gave access to a large network of even quieter "yellow" roads that were just hilly enough to make life interesting without being exhausting. Although in Cheshire, the Shropshire and Staffordshire borders were not far away and we travelled through all three counties over the week.
Cheshire County Council must have been one of a number of rural authorities that took the government's policy of removal of old-fashioned signposting from roads as an "aspiration" rather than an "instruction" back in the 1960s and so I was able to indulge my passion for photographing the old milestones and fingerposts that abounded there but have disappeared from many parts of the country. My favourite was this one in the hamlet of Wilkesley.
Note the Cheshire County Council ("CCC") badge on the post and, most unusually, the maker's name at the base
The rather improbable W.H.Smith & Co of Whitchurch, which was actually a foundry and not a chain of booksellers!
That example was on a junction of two minor roads, but Cheshire also retained some fingerposts on "A" roads such as this one we came across on the A529 which was supposed to have been removed when its modern replacements were installed, although it appears that maintenance and repainting has since ceased.
In a car you probably wouldn't notice these signs. Indeed one of the reasons for replacing them was that modern traffic goes too quickly for them to be of much use and it was felt that drivers slowing down suddenly at junctions to check directions would be a hazard to faster traffic behind. (These days it would be called "traffic calming"). Even when you do notice them - and other things of interest - from a car there's never anywhere to stop to take a photo, which is one of the reasons I like travelling by bike.
3 comments:
Hi Jim
Glad you enjoyed Audlem, as a former Nantwich resident I know it well. In fact Ros and I were there on Sunday, mid afternoon, we stopped for an ice-cream from the Post Office whilst passing through . . . (as one does!)
Cheers
Dave
Jim, I have been enjoying your bus journey write-ups. I remember a long time ago you gave some hints on how to navigate bus timetables etc. Could you point me towards that post? I want to travel by bus, if possible (and I'm sure it must be!), from Market Drayton to Fazeley (or Tamworth) on a weekday afternoon. I have found a bus to take me to Shrewsbury, but can't find the fare anywhere. I'm sure you can help!
Halfie
If you’d like to email me at jiminlancaster”at”gmail.com and confirm the earliest time you can leave Drayton I’ll work something out for you although I don’t think it would be a quick journey and Shrewsbury is in the wrong direction as far as bus routes go!
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