Friday 17 February 2012

Donnington Wood Canal - Muxton to Abbey Farm (Pt4)

Donnington Wood Canal
Shropshire Golf Club, Muxton to Abbey Farm
February 2012

If you notice a sudden change in the light levels it will be because this is where we started our days exploration, and there is a good reason for this. The golf club do not welcome casual walkers wandering round their grounds, so we decided that we would simply stride in with confidence at dawn, before anyone was around to notice us.

Donington Wood canal at back end of golf club




Out tactics worked and wow, were we rewarded. Previous accounts of this canal are silent about the section between the golf club and Lilleshall Abbey, and this rather unofficial sortie provided some excellent canal hunting, as you will see.

Canal track beside the driving range

The section starts behind the driving range, with the canal line hugging the side fence and peppered with stray balls. The line curves to the right and suddenly the trench emerges in the rough, a spluttering start but then like an ageing engine, it settles down and runs as sweet as a nut. It skips on and off another fairway, looking very much like a canal at this point before exiting the club grounds. 

More navigable than the Swan Arm on the BCN!

Canal bed in the rough

By now the ditch is very clear as it passes Lilleshall Grove Farm, a long straight section lined with trees as crossing open farmland. The canal runs on a low embankment before terminating abruptly 400 yards before Abbey Farm.


Canal bed at Lilleshall Grove Farm

We could just make out a perfect hump backed bridge through the early morning mist. Prudence, a stout barbed wire fence and howling farm dogs suggested that further exploration would be unwise, so we settled for some photos with a telephoto lens and retreated to the relative safety of the golf club. 

Accommodation bridge at the rear of Abbey Farm

Our policy is that a line has been fully explored if we can lock sight on a landmark from both sides on an inaccessible section, so for this bit it's "job done".

1 comment:

Frank Clarijs said...

Quite surprising how much you can trace back in the open land. I would think that farmers would have ploughed over the land (which they do in Belgium even if they are not allowed to, unless someone complains strongly).
What would keep the farmers, except for the effort to remove the trees? And who owns this land now?