Classic English beauty combines with a watery world for this week’s walk at Studley Royal, in Yorkshire. I’ve been there several times and always been cursed with dismal weather. The balmy Autumn that we’ve been experiencing was just perfect for this visit. A Cistercian Abbey, water gardens and a deer park- irresistible? I think so! But don’t forget to take your purse. Being a National Trust property, it doesn’t come cheap. (currently £10.50- no concessions, unless you are a National Trust member)
Some things don’t change. The monks who came here in 1132 were pretty good at amassing money too. Thirteen Benedictine monks left St. Mary’s Abbey in York to found a Cistercian Abbey in this valley. It became one of the richest in Europe. Something that has changed, since my last visit, is the approach to the park. You used to be able to drive into the estate through the deer park, but traffic now is all routed via the Visitor Centre. Pick up a map at reception, and let’s go.
The ruins are extensive and Fountains Abbey Mill is the only 12th century Cistercian cornmill left in the UK. It was in continuous use until 1927, and today houses an interactive exhibition and the water wheel, which can still grind corn.
If you’ve never been here before, you will almost certainly be impressed with what comes next. After the dissolution of the monasteries in 1539, the Abbey buildings and over 500 acres of land were sold by the Crown. The property was passed down through several generations until it was inherited by John Aislabie, in 1693. He was a socially and politically ambitious man and became Chancellor of the Exchequer in 1718, but his involvement in the South Sea Bubble financial scandal had him expelled from Parliament. On his return to Yorkshire, he turned the wooded valley of the River Skell into one of England’s most spectacular Georgian water gardens.
A group of volunteer gardeners are raking pond weed from the canals- a pleasant enough occupation on such a sunny afternoon. The curve of the Moon Pond stretches ahead, the pillars of the Temple of Piety a focal point on the far side. Originally the Temple of Hercules, it is believed to have been renamed when John Aislabie’s son, William, commissioned a bas relief wall sculpture inside the temple, after his father’s death.
You need to walk along the canal and cross over a narrow bridge to reach the Temple of Piety. From the bridge there’s a good view across the lake to the deer park. I didn’t spot any deer at that distance, but was diverted by one of the park’s follies, the Octagon Tower. A neo-Gothic castle, it looked to me very inviting, but sadly I couldn’t climb it. Beneath it lies a Serpentine Tunnel, originally designed to give people a bit of a fright at garden parties.
I couldn’t climb the tower, but I did find somewhere to look down onto the park. A sign directing me to Anne Boleyn’s Seat and Surprise View could not be ignored. I’ll spare you the climb because it was pretty steep, but I think you’d like the view. You will have an advantage over Anne Boleyn, who never actually saw it. That’s not because she didn’t have a head, but the name does come from a headless statue.
Back on the path, you can return along the opposite side of the canal, steadily approaching the Abbey. There you will have a number of diversions. You can visit the Mill or the tea rooms, and Fountains Hall is a stately exhibition space. (with holiday flats to let!) Any children with you will love the interpretation centre at the Porter’s Lodge. (I did too!) And if you have time and energy to spare, there’s the Gothic extravagance of St. Mary’s Church and a stroll round the deer park.
Don’t take my word for all this. The National Trust website will tell you the whole story and provide instructions on how to get there. I think that you would enjoy this World Heritage Site. I know I did. And now it really must be time to put the kettle on, don’t you think?
Click on the logo to visit my Jo’s Monday walk page for details on how to join in. As always we have a wonderful variety of walks to share.
How about a sample of Finnish nature with Vasilis? I hope you’ve met before? And the lingonberry tart looks so good! :
Yvette’s taking street portraits and searching for a missing lady. Please share this one :
Street photos from Charlottesville, VA
Join Drake, very thoughtfully making war on waste :
Making people happy in Jerusalem- that’s Cardinal this week :
Street Portrait : The Photographer
Amy has been having some more fun with her bird friends :
And Jude has the most delicious selection of Michaelmas Daisies you ever saw! :
Welcome a Blogspotter please! Violet Sky has a very fun post to add to the collection. Do go and say ‘hello’. :
Pauline is in transit again, but has been kind enough to share a trip ‘over the border’ to New South Wales. Safe travels, Pauline and Jack! :
Lingering look at Heritage windows
That’s it for this week. It just remains to wish you all ‘happy walking!’
Gosh how gorgeous. I will be in the UK in spring! Can’t wait!!! ❤
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That’s a nice time to be here, Cindy. Have you an itinerary planned? 🙂
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Amazing landscaping…. about that sculpture that is holding something in her/his hands. Are you sure it is a female?
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My eyesight has been called into question already, Paula. The conclusion is I need a white stick as well as a new brain. 🙂 🙂 I’ll try to find time for my lesson after tea/supper. 🙂
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😆
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I think you/we got our money’s worth. What a marvellous walk.
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That’s one way to look at it! 🙂 🙂 The grounds are truly beautiful, Ann, and the weather gods were definitely on my side.
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Internet very hit and miss where we are now Jo. Hope I’ve managed to get some of the photos of my beach walk with the dog to load. http://pommepal.wordpress.com/2014/10/13/beach-walk-joining-jo's-monday-walk-group
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Hi Pauline 🙂 Yes, I got it ok! Many thanks!
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Good… 🙂
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Hey Jo – enjoyed your lovely walk – and I felt such a balance of the greens with sculpture/architecture – and glad you did not get rained out (which I see from some of the comments that rainy days are common there) and well, that blue sky makes the lake and canal just that much nicer – peace – and thanks for this walk today! ❤
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Hi Yvette 🙂 I still haven’t managed a ‘Joy is’ 😦 😦 It’s on the list 🙂 Happy weekend to you!
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Hi Jo, I enjoyed the sense of history wandering around the abbey with you. Here in the “New World” I got out and about in our capital city this week. http://jillscene.com/2014/10/10/wellington-on-a-good-day/
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More excitement! 🙂 🙂 Thanks a lot, Jill. I’ll be right over!
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A thoroughly enjoyable walk, as always 🙂
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Thanks, Ana 🙂
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Seems we were of similar minds this week Jo: http://wp.me/pL5Ms-1L5
though yours is more impressive! I don’t believe that I have visited Fountains, at least not since childhood! A visit to Yorkshire is definitely a ‘must do’. No wifi all week in Dorset, so I have a LOT of catching up to do this weekend, but I thought I’d make a start with you 🙂
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Thank you very much! 🙂 Was your weather kind? It makes a nice change to be without WP for a bit doesn’t it? Till it comes to catch up! 🙂
Just off to cook tea so will read yours shortly.
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Weather pretty decent – had a couple of rainy nights with thunder and lightning and yesterday was very windy. Lunch at the beach in a rainstorm was fun (we were indoors), and hit a couple of thunderstorms driving home today, but otherwise good.
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such beautiful and amazing story and the images makes it live!
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It’s easy to tell the story with views like that. 🙂 Thank you for your kind words.
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What a fabulous stroll that was Jo!! And the perfect weather too. Love those views and reflections. Seems to me that the sculpture pondering the broken thing in its hand is a ‘He’! 😉
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I’m worried now about what he’s broken! Pauline came to the same conclusion! Did I ever mention that I’m not very observant? 🙂 🙂
Welcome back, Madhu! Did you have a fantastic time? Funny, I thought just this morning- I wonder when Madhu’s back? I bet it went quickly for you!
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Umm I imagine you are not if you didn’t notice that!!! 😀 Thanks Jo. Yes, it seemed to fly by!
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It is a statue of Galen and HE (yes it is a he – look at your first image) is probably holding arteries in his hands as his most important discovery was that arteries carry blood although he did not discover circulation.
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Jude, you are a font of all knowledge 🙂
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I wish! No I just used Google 🙂
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Oh, I say! What a dreadful cheat 🙂 🙂 I should have too!
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I have never been to England, but this is exactly how imagine English countryside to be.
Your beautiful photos reminded me of a movie I saw many years ago: “Sense and sensibility” with Emma Thompson. The scenery in the movie looked almost the same as the landscape in your post.
Thank you Jo for taking us to this wonderful place. Big thanks also for featuring my walk in the Finnish nature. It is very kind of you. Looking forward to your next Monday’s walk.
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You’re very welcome, Vasilis. 🙂 It’s fascinating to amass posts from around the world and see the differences in where people ‘walk’. I’d love a Greek one from you.
Yes, Studley Royal is most definitely Jane Austen territory. She lived not too far away from there.
Thanks a lot for your comment.
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Wow, Jo, what a wonderful walk for an autumn day. I was confused for a bit as I visited a Fountains Abbey, but I didn’t go to Yorkshire. This was down in the Cotswolds. So I guess there must be two or more?? I know I would have enjoyed this walk with you! Your photos of the ruins, the blue sky with its dramatic white clouds, and the ponds, are wonderfully enticing. 🙂
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I can just imagine striding around that park with you, snapping away, Cathy! That would be such fun. 🙂 I don’t know the other but I’m not very familiar with the Cotswolds. Happy days!
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It’s so weird, I wish I could remember where that Fountains Abbey was. I wonder if it’s the same, because that castle sounds familiar too. And some of your photos look familiar but I don’t remember the ponds. I don’t know how it could be the same though, because I didn’t think we were in Yorkshire. Sadly my trip to England was before my blogging days; I’d have to be home looking at my photo album to figure out where it was. 🙂
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There is a fountain and gardens in the Cotswolds near Cheltenham, but it is called Stanway – is that the one you visited?
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I don’t think so, Jude. I really do think it was Fountains Abbey. How I wish I had blogged back then so I could have the facts before me! My photo album is in Virginia, so I can’t look at it now, sadly. 🙂
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Lovely Jo I vaguely remember Fountains Abbey from a school trip when I was knee high to a grasshopper (about 60+ years ago) so it was lovely to see it in your photos. BTW I think that lady sculpture may be a man!!!??? He/she appears to have a lower appendage. 😉
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Oh, dear me, you have me worried now, Pauline. I dare not look too closely. A sculpture values their privacy, you know 🙂 Are you home again? Back to the trusted and familiar. It was a good jaunt, wasn’t it? 🙂
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We were briefly home for a whirlwind 5 days then hopped on the Greyhound bus for a 7 hour trip south to Nambucca on the NSW coast for a 12 day house sit…
Will be blogging about it soon, when I find the time. Already have 100’s of photos!!!!!
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This is truly magnificent, Jo 😀
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English Heritage at its best, Dianne 🙂
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Fabulous photos, Jo. The reflections are so beautiful. That sculpture look as though it’s holding something which has been broken in two. Now I really want to know what it is. 😕 The Octagon Tower looks so beautiful through the trees. 🙂
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I thought a musical instrument of some kind, Ad, but I was just guessing. 😦 It’s a grand place for photo opportunities, isn’t it? Thank you 🙂
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Anne Boleyn’s Seat is by far the most unusual viewing station I’ve ever seen.
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I didn’t know what I was going to see when I got up there but it was certainly worth the climb. 🙂
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