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Id
W-015
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Date
as yyyy-mm-dd
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New Track file
Story
Route from the Bristol Post
. Here is a more
accurate map
on Google Map of the route based my reconnoitre. This shows the location of the parking bay and the pub. The walk has some great views over Bristol to the north and over Chew Valley to the south. Lots of horses, sheep and cows, even the occasional Kestrel, but they all looked friendly (see below).
Points of interest include:
The village of
Dundry
has its own
website
The
church
tower in the Perpendicular style was built in 1482 possibly with funds from the Merchant Venturers and was used as a navigational mark.
In the churchyard there is a 1.5 m high cube of local stone called the dole-stone, on which alms were issued to the needy poor.
Yellow
oolithic
limestone or Dundry Freestone (meaning it can be cut and worked in any direction) from the
Jurassic
was quarried here till 1921. Stone from here has been used in the building of Dundry Tower, Cardiff Castle, Dublin Castle and medieval Bristol, particularly St Mary Redcliffe Dundry stone is similar to Cotswold stone. There is more about the stone and its uses in the
Avon Stone Atlas
Dundry Down is the site of numerous old quarries. There are a number of small caves on the down but most have been covered over by the spawling farm scrap yard. One on the Southern flank is home to Horseshoe bats (see map)
Dundry Main Road South Quarry
and
Barnes Batch Spinney
are Sites of Special Scientific Interest. Ammonites have been analysed in the
Inferior Oolite
Springs and wells in the area are supplied by water captured in the layer between the Midde Jurassic limestone cap and the underlying Early Jurassic clay.
Land Yeo
has its source on the Western end of Dundry Hill
Dundry Hill is classified as a Marilyn - a peak with a relative height over 150 m
Springs on the northern flank of Dundry are the source of the
Malago
which runs through South Bristol to the Avon
The plant pathologist
Lawrence Ogilvie
lived at The Dingle in East Dundry
This route is based on a number of paths:
The outbound part is along the
Avon Community Forest Walk
The return track is along the
Samaritans Way
We can then include the
Dundry Hilltop Walk
if we dont want to go straight to the pub.