ICLOK
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15 years ago
I couldn't resist... this was based on a real walk, the light caught me out and I ended up passing thru Magpie on my way from Mandale to Sheldon.... (for Sougher)

Magpie and Moon

Across the peak in t’owd mans step,
Winter sun dies cold o’er West,
Skies claw the moor on cutting winds,
To drive me on passed Red Soil vein.
And whisper tales of murder there,
Beneath the Hawthorn’s blasted stare,
O’er levels now beyond recall,
Dark Magpie there doth rise before.
Its chimney points to blackened sky,
Surveyed by windswept lunar eye,
The moon off agent’s panes reflects,
Doorway dark in night times depths.
By pick hewn stones I walk alone,
Watched by Headgear black and blown,
For path I search then onwards by,
Tip and engine house up high.
The ruddy moon guides me now,
Watching me through rushing cloud,
As Magpie’s liberty I do leave,
Ne’r to look back at darkened eave,
As on to Sheldon I do hike,
There to end my winter’s night.

By ICLOK


🔗Magpie-Lead-Mine-User-Album-Image-43869[linkphoto]Magpie-Lead-Mine-User-Album-Image-43869[/linkphoto][/link]

Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaagh Creeper!!!!!
AR
  • AR
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15 years ago
I do hope you ended your winter's night in proper fashion i.e sat by the fire in the Cock & Pullet with a pint! :tongue:
Follow the horses, Johnny my laddie, follow the horses canny lad-oh!
ICLOK
  • ICLOK
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15 years ago
How did you know 😞 :lol:
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaagh Creeper!!!!!
AR
  • AR
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15 years ago
Just a wild guess...a friendly little pub which serves good beer and has an open fire might just be tempting to someone who's walked over from Magpie/Fieldgrove/Whale Sough/Hard Rake etc., etc. :thumbsup:
Follow the horses, Johnny my laddie, follow the horses canny lad-oh!
ICLOK
  • ICLOK
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15 years ago
My hands were bl**dy freezing, there was no way I could have driven straight away... great you knew the walk... said fire was most welcome... in fact I'm overdue a trip out to my fave bookshop... that could be a nice diversion on the way back!!
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaagh Creeper!!!!!
ttxela
  • ttxela
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15 years ago
Good stuff, was that photo taken last night?

We stayed there in February this year and it was quite fresh inside the agents house even with the stove lit.

Summer is keen for a return trip next year but it must snow again 😉

UserPostedImage
ICLOK
  • ICLOK
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15 years ago
No it was taken December 08.... When I took it the sky was black behind me, and the light failed in a few mins ... it was an iffy walk to Sheldon I'll tell you! Coldest I'd ever known my hands!!! 😢
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaagh Creeper!!!!!
sougher
15 years ago
Dear Iclok - thank you for dedicating your lovely poem about Magpie to me, very greatly appreciated.

I love Magpie - in all weathers, and first visited it in the early 1950's just after the end of the Korean war which ended in 1954, after the New Zealand mining company that reopened it ceased mining, after world metal ore prices drastically dropped. I became a regular visitor from 1962 onwards, right through the very bad winter of 1962/63 when all the regular members of PDMHS made it by hook or by crook to the cottage every weekend, we always got through regardless of snow drifts, blizzards, ice - I shudder to think of that winter whenever I remember (we slept upstairs in all our clothes, in double thick sleeping bags, ice on the inside of the bedroom windows, no form of heating whatsoever, one had to be hard to endure those conditions believe me). There was no generator then for electricity, this was before the cottage got burnt down, we had a 1930's type Triplex cooking range, which heated a side boiler (only some idiot forgot to fill the boiler up with water and the boiler burst), and heated the living room, there was a small pantry off (now the generator home) which we used as a kitchen and cooked on primus in it. The living room was to the left of the front door and the lounge where folk could talk and books were kept was to the right of the front door. The stairs today are the reverse of the original stairs, they originally faced the door that led in from the garden, one went straight upstairs to about four bedrooms. The present day layout is completely different from the original Mine Manger's House which was burnt down (from memory) about late 1966 or early 1967 (it is recorded in PDMHS's records) and that is when the forge was used for accommodation.

I've never been in the "Cock and Pullet". I have, however, spent quite a few happy hours in the "Devonshire Arms" in Sheldon which was the original pub (same building) from 1962 onwards. It was a parlour pub, more like someone's living room. It was housed in a cottage and run by Vince the landlord (who I think farmed as well - ask Mav and Mike they'll remember it better, they were young students at Sheffield University then) and his sisters. One stepped into a cottage sitting room with an open fire and seats all around, beer was served in white and pink jugs, which were taken into a pantry for filling where the beer barrels were kept, and beer was poured via a tap into the jug. One soon learnt not to move the chairs in the parlour and pull them near the fire, as if one did, Vince virtually strode into the parlour lifted one up by the scruff of one's neck, moved the chair back into it's original place by his other arm and then one was deposited back in the chair. Words were not spoken, but thereafter one learnt not to move the furniture around, (AR - ask Mav and Mike about Vince, they'll have a tale to tell). Another good pub was the "Bull's Head" at Monyash, a lovely homely pub (nothing like the size it is today) with an elderly, very kind and friendly landlord, he once saved a ten shilling note change that we had forgotten to take off the counter on one visit we made, for several weeks until our next visit. Another time we had our six month old son with us and we left him outside in our car, the Landlord was very annoyed with us and told us to bring our baby in immediately. I felt awful as the licensing laws forbade children in pubs, so I explained why we hadn't brought him in, and he said "I'm the landlord, I decide who comes in my pub, and I've told you to bring him in" which I did. I always found the indigineous folk in the area, once one had broken through their reserve always very helpful and friendly.

I must stop reminising otherwise it gets boring for other AN members. :bored:

Anyway Iclok many thanks for the poem. It really sums up one of Magpie's many moods.
Brakeman
15 years ago
As soon as I read the title of this thread, for some reason the name Iclock sprung to mind.

Very good that indeed, I too have walked past this site several times in the early evening in winter, but alas I am unable to put together said poem...

When we were married in October 1977 we spent our honeymoon driving throughout Derbyshire, in my old Rover 60 P4, no money for a fancy holiday abroad or out like that in those days and of course our first port of call was the Magpie mine.

Funny how the missus always brings this up in conversations. 🙂
The management thanks you for your co operation.
ICLOK
  • ICLOK
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15 years ago
Its an eerie place in the dark wind and rain... which I love in reality as its eerie yet familiar, I love the place in the day whatever the weather... so much atmosphere for pics.... glad you liked...
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaagh Creeper!!!!!
AR
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15 years ago
I didn't get chance to speak to Mike and Mave about the Devonshire Arms last night, but I did give Steve Thompson a lift back and him being a 1960's SUSS veteran he remembered what the place was like (half of cider for the lasses, pint of Ind Coope mild for the lads) , and recalled Vince and his sisters getting presented with a certificate from the brewery for the Gyte family having sold Ind Coope from the pub for 100 years! Harry Parker took a photo of this apparently.

The building was sold last year, along with some of the attached farmland which included Talbot Holes mine. Shame I didn't win the lottery about then other wise I would have bought it, and the Hubberdale dressing floor when that came up for sale recently!
Follow the horses, Johnny my laddie, follow the horses canny lad-oh!

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