Monday, 15 June 2026

Holderness: Hedon, Preston, Lelley, Sproatley


A mild, still day with light cloud and sunny spells, very pleasant for walking. I take the 75 to Hedon. Swifts and House Martins fly over the church. Then I walk north along Church Lane and then along Preston Road, where a dual bike/pedestrian lane is parallel to the road until Preston. I record aquatic plants from bridges and popped to the edge of a hay meadow, where I find my first Ringlet and Meadow Brown of the year.


Ringlet.
Meadow Brown.
House Sparrow.
Mating Goldfinches.
Mating Goldfinches.
Small Tortoiseshells. I see a few along today's route.
A Roesel's nymph on a grassy field margin.
This Blackbird was singing while holding food in its mouth.
I'm so pleased each time I find a Yellow Wagtail on these walks. This one was on the roof of Woodhouse Farm.

I walk along East End road and then cut across Woodhouse Farm track to Nuttles Road, to Lelley. It is a busy road, and although the verges have been cut, it is not a pleasant stretch of road. I have my lunch at Lelley war memorial bench, and then I go to the Stag's Head for a coffee and toilet break. After, it's a bridleway to Sproatley, what a joy to be away from the traffic. There are some 


New York Farm sign.
A street in Lelley.
Rabbits.
Lelley Balk, a bridleway.
Linnet.
A Lesser Black-backed Gull mobs a passing Buzzard.

Buzzard.

I get to the edge of Sproatley and meander around the minor streets aiming for the Church. There are wooded footpaths and a lovely meadow, where I disturb a Roe Deer buck, which barks as it bounds away. I'm in luck that the direct bus to Hull, 277, is in 10 minutes. I will have to start two more walks at Sproatley, so I'm happy to leave exploring more of the village for then.

Cottage at Boggle's Lane.
Large Skipper.
St Swithun's Church at Sproatley.

Monday, 8 June 2026

Holderness: Hornsea, Mappleton, Cowden

On the ground, little is left of the original Great Cowden, one of the lost villages of the Holderness Coast. The lane that would have taken to the centre of the village, Garthends Lane now ending sharply at the edge of the boulder clay cliff (top shot). The name, Cowden, though, brings great memories of one of my favourite walks along the Holderness coast, so I had included it in the list of places to visit. On the OS map there is Cowden Sands, a few farms like Cowden Magna, Cowden Parva and Little Cowden; Cowden Road from Withernwick, and of course Cowden Firing Range. Two roads leading to Cowden also survive: Eelmere Road and Garthends Lane. The public right of way parallel to Garthends, and now part of the coastal path was also a footpath from the lost village. The old 1889 OS maps show the village then and the presence of a methodist church. The locals responded dynamically to the loss of the village. Several farms were set up inland to common land, and bungalows were built along Eelmere. A caravan park was set up in the 1950s also carrying the name. 

Today, I get the 24 to Hornsea and walk around Stream Dike. A Sedge Warbler sings from a patch of reedy scrub. I then take Hornsea Burton road towards Rolston Road, and take bus 129, which was running late, the few stops to Mappleton. It is a showery day, but it promises to clear later. I plan to walk back to Hornsea later from Mappleton on the beach, on the falling tide. But for now, I walk on the footpath at the base of the cliff between the granite groynes in Mappleton doing some recording. A high school Geography class is on a field trip from Barnsley, and one of the teachers apologises if I was expecting a quiet walk. No matter, I'm walking to Cowden, so it should be fine. 

Sedge Warbler.
Horses at Mappleton.
Bee Orchids.
Mappleton defences.

I take the coastal path to Cowden. The rain has left the wheat soaking wet and there is not much of a footpath, the field ending perilously on the cracked clifftop. I move inland to a tractor track parallel to the cliff edge, and marvel again how the farmers really cut it very think when ploughing and planting these field edges, as often large chunks of land with crops ends at the bottom of the cliff. The coastal path takes a detour through the caravan park and some farms and is on the road for a while. At last there is now a footpath by the road between the caravan park and Garthends Lane. At Garthends Lane I watch a Yellowhammer singing and then I delight at hearing a distant Cuckoo, only the second I hear this year. After a few minutes it is closer and louder, the sound coming from Cowden Range. Today, I don't walk to Aldbrough, but to the end of Garthends Lane.

Looking back towards Mappleton.
Yellowhammer at Garthends road
The Cross Keys. An old pub had just been demolished in the OS map of the village from at the edge of the cliff, and was rebuilt inland in 1943, at the crossroads of Eelmere Lane and the Aldbrough road.

A few Swifts fly over Garthends Lane.
Cowden Firing range in the distance.
Singing linnet.
A Woodpigeon on the fence at Eastfield Farm, using the Cowden name.

The name Eelmere may derive from a lost mere. In the 13th century there is evidence of an Eelmere, or 'eel pool', and a Broadmere. There is no trace of these or of basins in the area in old OS maps, so,they are likely to have been lost to erosion, as other meres in Holderness. There is Eelmere Bottom and Eelmere Hill nearby.

A Reed Bunting singing from a rapeseed field.

There are very short showers, but later in the morning the weather steadies and at midday, from the edge of Garthends, I turn back towards Aldbrough on the main road. Since my last walk there has been the welcome improvement of the pedestrian pavement along the road. Although narrow, it is a relief not to constantly have to check for the traffic. This facilitates the connection between Cowden and Mappleton beach, as there is no access from the caravan park to the beach. As I get to Mappleton beach, the students are on a break, but they are back at the beach as I eat my packed lunch. I hurry and start the beach walk back to Hornsea on the falling tide. Other than a couple of dog walkers, it is quiet. I stop to take some photos of the young Sand Martins in their nests, close to fledging.


Sand Martins.
Another Sand Martin colony on a sandy area of the cliff.
These caves on the cliff front might be due to ice blocks formerly enclosed by the clay
The sea by Hornsea south cliff.
A Painted Lady on the beach.
Stream Dike.
A Reed Warbler at Stream Dike.
Herring Gulls at Hornsea.

Friday, 29 May 2026

Holderness: Lambwath Meadows with Hull Nats


The day after the record hottest May day, we head to the heart of Holderness in the Lambwath Valley to reach the SSSI Lambwath Meadows. This site consists of a series of fields separated by ditches on the basin of the old Lambwath Mere, now drained. Several of the meadows had been cut for hay for centuries in the traditional way, and hence they have retained a treasure trove of flora rare in the area. With the permission of the owners Carstairs Countryside Trust and led by a farmer that lives on the edge of the meadows, we start exploring the place. It is warm, but there is a light cool breeze from the north west that is very welcome. Butterflies and other insects are a plenty, and soon Matt Fox points out a Dingy Skipper and later finds a Brown Argus. There are many Chimney Sweeper moths, which reflect the abundance of Pignut. Pepper Saxifrage, Yellow Rattle, and Meadow Rue are also widely spread, the latter in the lower levels. We get a view of the wide valley, in places showing a steep slope. Two fields over, there is a carpet of orchids, many of them past their best. They are Green-veined Orchids, we find some that are still at peak condition. The farmer tells us that during winter the area is flooded, and that flooding used to last more.  

Swallow.
House Martin.
Swift.
Painted Lady licking salts from dog mess.
Chimney Sweeper.
Latticed Heath.
A view of the site.
Common Blue Butterfly.
Dingy Skipper. A species that appears to be expanding.
Possibly Common Spotted Orchid.
Marsh Harrier.
Green-veined Orchid.
Green-veined White.
Running Hare.
Small Copper.
Roe Deer buck.
Brown Argus.
Flower-rich meadow.