Wednesday, May 20, 2015

Walk & Wednesday Pub Lunch #18 The Liver Hotel, Waterloo

The 5.2062 mile (8.3786 km) walk route, of our 18th W&WPL, has been saved and is available at...


Today, we started from Sandhills Station, having travelled from Maghull Station by Merseyrail
We made our way out of the station a turned right along Sandhills Lane, uphill to the Canal Bridge...
 ...turning right, down steps, we  went onto the Leeds Liverpool Canal tow-path where we saw a number of narrowboats, heading towards Liverpool (at a guess, for the 2 Queens Visit - http://www.cunard.co.uk/cruise-types/anniversary-cruises-2015/liverpool/)...
 The first thing we spotted were Coots  and their chicks...
 
...We stayed on the tow-path until we reached the new bridge at Pennington Road
On the route we were lucky to see Spring flowers...

 
 ...and, after about a mile...
 ...ducklings...
 ...and more nesting geese...
 On a wall, next to Miller's Bridge was an interesting mural...
 ...Trywel rhaw gordd Bwyell (Welsh) meaning
Axe-hammer shovel trowel...
· adeiladu · build ·
(adeiladu is Welsh, meaning build)

David Jacques completed this project with Safe Productions for British Waterways & Sefton M.B. Council
Combined with educational workshops at Queens Road Community Centre, the project 
"looked at the contribution Welsh migrant workers made in the navigation of the canal and various construction works in the Merseyside area."
It also referenced a census of first language Welsh speakers resident in the region at the beginning of the 1900’s, reputed to number in excess of 30,000.

The tool ‘shadows’ (sourced from a Victorian tool catalogue) were cut out of fibreglass sheets and embedded into a concrete render, the tool names (written solely in Welsh) were stencilled onto the render and the circular ‘title piece’ is a mosaic.
As you will see from the photographs, young coots, moorhens, ducks and geese were everywhere...
 

 



 
 We crossed the canal twice...
and as we passed under Washington Parade we spotted (hard to miss) the first mural...
 ...and then, when we crossed back, just before Stanley Road, there were more murals...


 Still more geese...

 ...dog roses (Rosa canina)...
 ...and goslings...

 were seen. We were so lucky to do this walk at this time.
at Pennington Road, although not planned, we had to leave the tow-path as it was blocked off here for the building of a swing-bridge; just before the A5036 (Church Road).
We went left down Pennington Road, right along Linacre Road and then left down Bridge Road.
At the round-about, we went clockwise, crossing three roads turning left along Princess Way.
After a short distance we turned right into Rimrose Valley Country Park.

Keeping to the left, and parallel to the railway line, we crossed Rimrose Brook...
 and continued along paths... 
 ...and board-walks to eventually emerge onto Brook Vale
Here we turned left onto Brooklands Avenue and, where the Avenue took a sharp right we took a footpath to the left, leading us to Bramhall Road.
Here we turned right, continuing our walk to Park Road, where we turned left.
At the junction with Haigh Road we turned Left, crossing Crosby Road North at the traffic lights.
We had arrived at our planned destination...
The Liver Hotel


You can find out what we thought of our Wednesday Pub Lunch at my...
After lunch we took a short wander along South Road, to the Railway station for our train journey home.

Another enjoyable Wednesday walk - our 18th!

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