20 September 2013

Rambling

More walking. Twice this week I have visited a bleak and hilly area north of Sheffield and along the road I had to pass this isolated pub called "The Travellers Inn". Once it would have catered for coach travel - I mean teams of horses and coach travellers - when the miles passed far more slowly than they do today.

I have rambled round Ingbirchworth, Denby Dale, Upper Denby, Lower Denby, Skelmanthorpe, Bagden Hall and to me the best name of all - Nether End. Nether End - like the end of the world. The word also appears within Sheffield's suburbs - Nether Green and Nether Edge. Both of our children were born at Nether Edge when the maternity hospital still stood there. Now it's a campus of luxury flats - a gated community - keeping the rest of the world out. The idea of living in such an exclusive "community" appals me.

A little etymological research tells me that the prefix "nether" means "under" or "lower" - like one's nether regions - somewhat hidden from view. "Denby" was once a "Settlement of the Danes" - harking back to the years - after the Roman occupation - when Yorkshire was invaded by Vikings and other Norsemen. Many Yorkshire place names and family names - including my own - can be traced back to those early Danish settlers. Even the name York sprang from its Viking name - Jorvik.

It was good to be out in the wind today, under scudding clouds, plodding along unfamiliar paths. You never know what you might see or when you might encounter a yapping pampered canine or even genuine wildlife. As I descended to a silvery pool in the babbling River Dearne - under a leafy canopy - an alarmed  heron flapped its way out of the trees and later a covey of grouse were equally startled - their clucking song resounding along the hedgerows as they left.

Then back past "The Travellers Inn" to Sheffield where I went straight to "Carpet Right" to purchase enough cheap carpet to cover a bedroom floor at our son's house. I have been decorating that room this week and had to admit that the carpet was gross and really needed replacing. I have also bought some new curtains as a previous tenant had roughly sliced the excess bottom inches off the old curtains with a pair of scissors, leaving ragged threads behind. The good thing about cheap carpets is that they tend to be thin so they're quite easy to cut. Fitting it myself will save £60.

Oh dear - this post appears to have rambled like a good old  country walk.

11 comments:

  1. That's the old Pudding I enjoy! Do you write about your walks from memory, or do you carry a notebook and pen with you and jot down pertinent info for future posts as you wander about the countryside?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Memory my lord though that memory is jogged by my maps.

      Delete
  2. I agree with RWP, I am glad we are back plodding with you ~ love those dark clouds. It looks like that poor little pub might get sucked up into that hole in the clouds as they pass over.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Carol. What an imagination you have young woman!...Or maybe God himself will peep through that hole to demand a pint of bitter and a packet of cheese and onion crisps.

      Delete
  3. You had me fooled for a moment. Etymology; I read it and thought what the hell has the study of insects got to do with Norse names. I'll remember etymology and work it into a post about entymology. That'll cause some head scratching amongst my mental peers.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Mental peers Adrian? Do you mean the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles?

      Delete
    2. If you look below you'll see I'm in good company.

      Delete
  4. Etymology.. that's moths innit? At least your cheapo carpet won't have any visitors of an etymological kind... it being man-made an'all.

    LLX

    ReplyDelete
  5. Derivation of "Lettuce" - from lac (genitive lactis) "milk" - concerning the milky juice of the plant.
    Derivation of "Adrian" - masc. proper name, from Latin Adrianus/Hadrianus, literally "of the Adriatic"

    Etymological exploration is really cool! Try it and see. I think you will both become amateur etymologists too! We can then form an online interest group!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh crumbs! Don't get me going... already my love of words is manifold.

      LLX

      Delete
  6. I guess you and Shirley won't be moving up the road from me, then. Rancho Murieta is a gated wannabe community that was stuck in the middle of farm land, 15 miles from the nearest city. It really is lovely, with all its custom homes planted amongst the native oak trees. If wouldn't be half bad if the people would disappear.

    ReplyDelete

Mr Pudding welcomes all genuine comments - even those with which he disagrees. However, puerile or abusive comments from anonymous contributors will continue to be given the short shrift they deserve. Any spam comments that get through Google/Blogger defences will also be quickly deleted.

Most Visits