There’s no two ways about it! England has some of the finest villages you could hope to find, and Hovingham, in North Yorkshire, is a prime example. In summertime it’s the perfect place to amble past old stone cottages, festooned with fabulous hollyhocks, to peer over the church wall.
In reality it was one of those days when summer is reluctant to parade itself for our pleasure, but I was still hopeful. We had passed through the village, on the Helmsley to Malton road, in search of Yorkshire Lavender. No amount of grey sky could dim that glory! Returning the same way, it seemed churlish not to stop the car and explore a little. Keep me company?
Beside the village green, the unusual Grade II listed school draws the eye. Ivy swaddles many of the buildings and colour cascades, at curb and much higher, to combat the grey. Locally grown tomatoes advertise their presence alongside fresh eggs. A breakfast here must be a total pleasure. I wonder what the gents at the cafe had.
Set back behind the main road stands magnificent Hovingham Hall. This Grade 1 listed Palladian style mansion was designed and built by Thomas Worsley between 1750 and 1770. The house is only opened to the public between 1st and 28th June each year, and I was sorry to have missed it. Entrance is unique in being through the former riding school, where George III was taught to ride. In front of the house, the oldest privately owned cricket pitch in England. I snuck as close as I dared for a look.
Over the garden wall I could see the Saxon tower of the parish church, All Saints. The name Hovingham has an interesting derivation, combining a ‘place of graves’ with a settlement in a ‘meadow near a river’. No sign of the river, but I could see some graves.
I was pleased to find that the church door was unlocked. Quiet reverence inside, an unusual font and beautifully carved organ pipes, lots of kneelers and some exquisite stained glass. Was there a significance to the dragon?
Crossing back towards the village green, my eyes lit up at the sight of a rocking horse, waiting impatiently at the window for its owner to return.
In a corner of the green, another church, very different in character. Methodist, with a ‘welcome’ sign on the door, I couldn’t spurn the invitation.
This village is full of surprises. Quite suddenly I came upon a ford, crossing Marr’s Beck and leading to the elusive River Rye. A neat little cafe and bakery sits alongside. The locals, undetered that it was closed, had brought a picnic to their favoured spot.
As if in celebration, just then the sun contrived to make an appearance, transforming the old stone and setting the hollyhocks nodding.
Isn’t England bonny in the Summer? I walked the length of the beck, beside the cottages and back to the main street.
How better to finish than with a bee, rolling in ecstasy? I hope you enjoyed our wander today.
It was touch and go this week, a router problem knocking the Internet out for countless hours, but I made it! Many thanks to all of you who’ve stuck with me. I had to get the job done so I could showcase these walks, didn’t I? Please take the time to visit them, if you possibly can. Pop the kettle on first? And do join in if you have a walk to share. The details are on my Jo’s Monday walk page.
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First up is Violet, with another attractive bridge for us to cross :
Then a hodge podge of food and stuff from Jackie :
I rather think Lady Lee had a good weekend!
Want to hear a ghost story? Then Drake’s your man!
Kathrin has her own version of scaling the Hollywood heights :
While Ann Christine likes to take it more gently :
A Walk at Lindo – In the Best Company
And our Meg is wordless, but inimitable :
Wordless walk: Hervey Bay Botanical Gardens
Where’s Woolly this week? He’s found a very large hole :
Jo’s-Monday-Walk-Wk30_Lochnagar-Crater-Pt-1
We finish with something rather unusual, recommended to me by Sheri, a keen walker herself :
Well, not quite finish, because I have to include Carol’s latest. Not totally a walk, but you may recognise someone :
I’m in two minds about next Monday because I shall be traveling to Shropshire (and hopefully meeting up with someone else you know). I do have another walk I’m desperate to share though. I’ll keep you posted. Have a great week!






Grossartig… 🙂
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Danke, Ernst 🙂 🙂
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Another beautiful walk Jo, I love all of the beautiful flowers 🙂
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Thanks, Sam! They seem to thrive on our crazy weather.
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Lovely photos! I confess, I love a dark sky; though sunshine is better.
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Hiya Tilly 🙂 🙂 Nice of you to return the visit. I don’t mind a bit of atmosphere to the sky either.
Are you still in contact with Sally, and Viv’s family? I still think of her on Saturday mornings when I walk across the park to zumba.
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Another beautiful walk! Love all the flowers and the pretty creeks and the church. What a beautiful little town Jo!
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Yorkshire is full of the finest villages, Nicole. Often enough we just pass through but sometimes it pays to stop and look. Glad you liked it. 🙂 🙂
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What a pretty little place, so neat everywhere. Not many people around though, are they all working in some big town? I’m glad the sun made an appearance for you even if brief, you deserve some blue sky sweetheart fro all your hard work on Monday Walks. Tuesday hugs to you x:-)x
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There’s not really a close-by big town, Gilly, though I suppose York is not so very far. It feels very much like a retirement village (and very well-heeled 🙂 ) but the folk who were about were very friendly. It’s poured most of today and I’m hanging on for news from the hospital of a very dear friend who is very poorly. Thanks darlin!
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I know Hovingham quite well. You’ve captured it nicely.
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Small world, Simon. 🙂 Where are you based?
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Derbyshire now but I used to live and work in Malton and get drawn to North Yorkshire like the tide.
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There are plenty of attractions. I have a daughter in Nottingham and a son in Leeds and I hover on the Moors whenever I get chance. 🙂 🙂
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Fine cities both and the North York moors are just about my favourite part of England. Many happy memories.
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Enjoyed the lovely walk of the beautiful village! 🙂
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Best not come with me today, Amy- it’s pouring 🙂 🙂 Thanks, darlin!
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A lovely walk – nice and quiet and sooo English and beautiful. Love hollyhocks too. Have a great week!
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Yes, sooo English, Leya 🙂 🙂 No walking today without an umbrella. Makes it hard to take photos. 🙂 Thank you!
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And with the soooo goes a loving heart! Anglophile by birth!
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🙂 🙂
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Another gorgeous village Jo and those hollyhocks well what more can you say – such a beautiful array of colours and I love the local stone too! Glad you got your compute problem sorted – mine was acting up this afternoon too very frustrating! Hope you have a lovely week 🙂
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Thanks, darlin! 🙂 Just a bit more rain here today but I’m hospital visiting so it won’t really matter. Take care! 🙂 🙂
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Sorry Jo for some reason missed this reply last week. Sorry you had such a tough week though and hope this week will be a better one, take care xx
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Jo I have begun to think you live in a fairytale land. One beautiful village after another. A gorgeous walk.
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Over the rainbow, Sue 🙂 🙂 Come with me!
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Would love to one day Jo. Careful or I will be in your doorstep. 🙂
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A dull day but the beauty of the place shines through.
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I love the creamy coloured stone in this village, Draco, and anywhere with water running through it makes me smile. 🙂 🙂
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Nothing like a walk with you in an English village. You see everything and are obviously attracted to a water walk. Beautiful photos Jo. And I have enjoyed walking with you. Maybe I will manage to get my sculpture park post finished this week!
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That would be nice, Jude, but no worries. I expect I’ll be around for a week or two yet 🙂 🙂 Priorites, m’dear! Sort them chillies and that son of yours! 🙂 Thanks, hon 🙂
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Oh, those orange begonias! I do love wandering and peeking into pretty gardens like this. Thanks for taking us along Jo.
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It was a delightful village, Carol. I think you could spend weeks just wandering in English villages. Come to think of it, I do 🙂 🙂
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We do too, when we get the chance. 🙂
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Pretty and pituresc little village, Jo you have a way of coming across these charming places like no other. If only the British Summer was a little bit more reliable? Such a shame you missed visiting Hovinghan Hall, but perhaps next Spring?
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At some point in the year (and often several times 🙂 ) I realise that I should make a calender of events to attend, Gilda. But then, I’d never fit everything in. 🙂 🙂 The weather’s not so great but looking at what’s happening in Europe I don’t think we’re doing too badly.
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charming village Jo! the hollyhocks remind me of dragor havn, a quaint village near copenhagen. love the church and i’ve never seen as colorful pipes and kneelers. thanks for the lovely walk! great pictures as always! such a wonderful treat!
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I nearly didn’t have a walk this week, hon, because I had no Internet. Just as I was starting to panic we got it fixed. 🙂 🙂 Hooray!
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so glad you had it fixed! can you imagine life without internet these days? 🙂
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Nightmare 🙂
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A bridge with 1887 inscribed, as if that isn’t remarkable 🙂 …and I know that is a relatively new date based on some others I’ve seen on your blog. Fun to notice all our similarities/differences.
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It makes a good photo, and I thought you might notice. 🙂 🙂
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Nothing impresses us americans like building that are older than our cars! 🙂
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” England has some of the finest villages you could hope to find.” – I certainly agree to that, Jo. Last night, we watched 2 epeisodes of “Midsomer Murders” and I was thinking along those lines. Sich wonderful old buildings. Plus the village life. Sigh!
Thanks for taking me around, and for all the wonderful pictures, especially of the blossoms.
Have a great week,
Pit
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The flowers love our mix of sunshine and showers, Pit. Everywhere looks so green this year! Thanks, hon! Have a good one yourself 🙂 🙂
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🙂
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I feel I just went on the stroll with ya!! I really do love the combination of the lush greenery and flowers with the older buildings and such – just gorgeous!! So nice that by reading your blog I get to see some incredible places!! Thank you! I really love your blog!!
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Oops! Just fished you out of the spam 😦 WP is very mean sometimes, but I do check pretty often. Thanks for strolling with me. I always enjoy a bit of company 🙂 🙂
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Nice mixture of nature’s and human nature’s imprint.
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The villages do tend to exemplify that, Sally. Lovely at this time of year. Good to have your company. 🙂 🙂
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