成人快手

Explore the 成人快手
This page has been archived and is no longer updated. Find out more about page archiving.

24 September 2014
Black CountryBlack Country

成人快手 成人快手page
England










Nearby Sites





Related 成人快手 Sites



Contact Us


WALK THROUGH TIME
You are in: Black Country > Uncovered > Walk Through Time > Page 8
Castle Woods
Castle Woods

Black Country Walk Through Time

Castle Woods

Continue down Gervaise Drive until you reach Woodland Avenue on the left.

View map of this stage
Route for this stage avoiding woodland

PREVIOUS
1234567891011
NEXT
Gervaise Drive
Gervaoise Drive

Historians look for clues in the landscape to find out about an area's history. Look at the shape of the road - there's a dip in it. It's hiding a river, which is culverted under the road.

Enter the footpath on the right-hand side of the road, opposite the turning into Woodland Avenue.

Optional: take the steep steps down to a dug out trench to look for lime pyes.

Lime pye
Lime pye - no ice cream

Nothing to do with tasty puddings, lime pyes were an old method of making quicklime. You'll spot them in cutting in the rock - the limestone here is a yellow colour - lime pyes are more orange, pink or red (see photo, right). To make them, you dig a hole in the ground, add charcoal to the limestone, light it and leave for week. Hey presto, turns into quicklime. When lime kilns were invented, this became the preferred way of making quicklime (more about that on page 10).

audioWhat is a lime pye? Listen to John Hemingway 禄

(If that's left you feeling peckish, visit 成人快手 Food to find out how to make ...)

Go back to the path, turn right and continue.

Entrance to Castle Woods
Entrance to Castle Woods from Gervaoise Drive

As you enter the wooded area, look out for Japanese knotweed on the right, a tall plant with thick bright green stems. This plant is a major pain - it grows very tall extremely quickly and kills off other plants because it blocks their light. If you cut it down, it just grows straight back. If you spray it with chemicals, it needs to be resprayed regularly for years until it stops growing. Even if you cover the ground with matting, it just grows through it. It's so strong, it can even grow up through paving slabs and concrete!

On the left of the path, you'll see butterbur. This plant is a herb with big flat umbrella-like leaves and thick green stems - it looks like rhubarb (it's sometimes called 'bog rhubarb'). Butterbur grows in wet conditions so it shows this area is boggy, perhaps the site of an old stream or pond. In the past, people used to wrap butter in the big leaves, hence the name 'butterbur' and it's been used as a medicine since the Middle Ages, to cure headaches and fever.

audioFind out more about Japanese knotweed and butterbur. Listen to Ali Glaisher 禄

Continue on the path through woods. Mind your head on the low branches and take care: this path can get muddy.

On your right is a disused quarry. The trees in it started to grow when it stopped being used. Lady Dudley planted trees to hide the "ugly" mines and quarries.

audioFind out more about who planted the trees. Listen to John Hemingway 禄

Path out of Castle Woods
Path out of Castle Woods

On the left of the path is a collapsed mine. The steep edges of the hollow indicated that the ground has fallen in on itself.

The whole of Dudley sits on top of mining 'galleries' which go deep underground. When the mines stopped being used, miners took some of the pillars. That, plus natural processes led to the mines collapsing. The biggest craters are called crown holes.

audioWhy have bits of Dudley collapsed? Listen to John Hemingway 禄
audioHow did the mine closures affect Dudley people? Listen to John Hemingway 禄
audioWhy are the old mines dangerous? Listen to John Hemingway 禄

In one of the big craters on the right of the path, you can see a modern problem: fly tipping. If people can be bothered to bring rubbish here to dump it, why not drive to the local tip?!

audioFind out about woodland trees. Listen to Ali Glaisher 禄
audioFind out about woodland flowers. Listen to Ali Glaisher 禄
audioFind out about woodland birds. Listen to Ali Glaisher 禄

Come out of the wood and turn right.

View map of this stage

Optional route:
If you need to avoid the woodland, make your way back along Priory Road. Turn left onto the Birmingham New Road and then turn right into the canal basin. You rejoin the walk at page 10.

Route for this stage avoiding woodland

PREVIOUS
1234567891011
NEXT
You are in: Black Country > Uncovered > Walk Through Time > Page 8
Return to homepage
HOME
Email your comments to  [sitename_email]@bbc.co.uk
EMAIL
Print out this page
PRINT
Return to the top of the page
TOP
SITE CONTENTS

Start of walk
Map of Dudley (漏 Crown copyright. All rights reserved. 成人快手 licence number 100019855, 2004)
漏 Crown copyright. All rights reserved. 成人快手 licence number 100019855, 2004

Enlarge this map Show whole map
Print map
Print this page
or ..
Print the entire walk
WATCH/LISTEN TO WALKS听Realplayer required
audio Lime pye
audio Japanese knotweed & butterbur
audio Castle Woods
audio Open mines & crown holes
audio Mine closures
audio Why are the old mines dangerous?
audio Woodland trees
audio Woodland flowers
audio Woodland birds
SEE ALSO
Gallery - Dudley fossils
Gallery - unusual fossils
Meet Wendy, local 成人快手 presenter
Birmingham Walk Through Time
Wolverhampton Walk

Black Country Uncovered

On bbc.co.uk
Hereford Walk Through Time
Stoke Walk Through Time
More Walks
Rest of the web
The 成人快手 is not responsible for the content of external websites
Contact us about this walk
Credits
Coral around Britain today
bullet point
bullet point
bullet point

成人快手 Black Country Website, The Mailbox, Birmingham, B1 1RF
phone: 0121 567 6041 | e-mail: blackcountry@bbc.co.uk


About the 成人快手 | Help | Terms of Use | Privacy & Cookies Policy