#Hathersage restaurants
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thegeorgehathersage · 7 months ago
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Step into The George in Hathersage for an exceptional dining and drinking experience. Our menu features wood-fired pizzas, chargrilled steaks, and a diverse selection of burgers, along with gluten-free and plant-based options. Enjoy locally brewed ales, craft draughts, Derbyshire gins, and hand-picked wines in our lively bar, making every visit memorable. Discover our breakfast, lunch, and dinner offerings in a setting perfect for all occasions.
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askrigg21 · 3 years ago
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It's hello to John and goodbye to Eric
It’s hello to John and goodbye to Eric
Changes at two Hathersage venues. MARTIN DAWES reports John Parsons: back in Hathersage JOHN PARSONS has taken over as head chef of Hathersage Social restaurant, replacing Cary Brown who has left to pursue a new venture in Sheffield. Cary enigmatically announced on Facebook that the business, previously known as Earnshaw & Brown at Hathersage Social was now simply Earnshaw. For John,…
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anneesheehan · 7 years ago
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Day 42: 16th May
Party time!
We have arrived in San Sebastián/ Donostia, the foodie capital of Europe (more Michelin Star restaurants per square mile than any other city than Tokyo) and the end of the Camino for my three amigas... half way point of the route for me.
Certainly time for a celebration with a cautious eye on how far the kitty would stretch.
But first a few words about today. We all ❤️ Orio and shortly before setting off this morning on a typically near vertical old road out of town,where even the church had a 2nd story entrance over the street, we were surprised to meet “biker dog” happily riding round in his master’s top box.
An imposing memorial to an important teacher from yesteryear was followed by a local Music School which struck a chord (argh!) with a certain other music teacher on the walk.
The route was relaxing and very scenic today, following high up above the coast with beautiful views of the sea.
There was an amusing moment when the four of us stumbled into a bar completely inhabited by local workmen having their lunch. Conversation stopped, forks held mid- air and all eyes on these four very non Spanish women suddenly invading their space... followed by eyes suddenly shifted to the TV on the wall or down at their plates in order not to seem offensive. I imagined my friends and I having a cream tea in Hathersage with 4 very Spanish guys suddenly walking in... I think our reactions would have been similar.
Mount Igeldo is at the extreme edge of San Sebastián and is home to an extremely retro ( knackered?) amusement park. There’s a funicular down to the beach to make it easy for the holiday makers but we just had to add to our list of Camino cheats and give it a try. It was seriously retro itself but it did the job (just) and took us to the famous La Concha beach and the beautiful city by the sea.
Classy buskers, smart dressers, chic perfume aromas from passers by... of course we fitted in just perfectly, hobbling around trying to find our accommodation with google on the phone.
Later after a good hot shower and ( partial) change of clothes we set off to do the pinchos bars of the old quarter which certainly lived up to their reputation and then some!
We did find a “locals” bar and I chatted to an old guy who had worked on the fishing boats and knew Dublin and Cork and Norway. I asked him if he would be eating the tapas but he pointed out he had no teeth so he just came for the wine.
The wine was certainly good and we can definitely vouch for that. A real feeling of achievement and arrival today and a rest day tomorrow!
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callcheapflights-blog · 7 years ago
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Best Walking And Hiking Routes In The UK
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Do you desire to climb a mountain? Want to gaze down a sheer ashen hill or walk around a pebbled cliff? Or maybe you’d favor a seaside stroll on top of the magnificent white rocks or over the striking surf on a chain of bridges and tunnels?
Studland Village to Old Harry Rocks, England.  
Difficulty: Easy.
Distance: 4 miles that’s about 6.5km.
Duration: 1 hour
The South West Coast Path passes over some stunning seaside countryside in England’s south-west – but the full course takes at least a month! Rather, test the small and uncomplicated four-mile part from Studland out to the penetrating white chalk piles of Old Harry Rocks. Glance across from here to the Isle of Wight – and Old Harry’s brother or sister the Needles – and look out for huge groups of wood pigeons on relocation. The track goes by the gates to the Pig on the Beach, which is certainly the ideal justification for a lunch stop in the extremely judged kitchen garden restaurant, book in advance though.
Mawddach Trail, Wales.
Difficulty: Easy.
Distance: 9.5 miles that’s around 15km.
Duration: 3 to 4 hours.
Unused railway tracks create the ideal walking path and this simple clearly marked track beside the southern border of the Mawddach delta makes for a light walk or also a bike ride from the bazaar town of Dolgellau between swamps and over the railway overpass at Barmouth. It’s 9.5 miles in full but could be compressed by two miles by connecting the track at Penmaenpool. Create time to relax and view the altering sands of the marsh – and watch out for all types of birds such as; pied flycatchers as well as wood warblers.
Sandwood Bay, Scotland.
Difficulty: Easy.
Distance: 8 miles, this means about 13km.
Duration: 4 to 5 hours.
With its lengths of golden sand mounds, sensational ridges and stone heaps away from the shoreline, Sandwood Bay on Scotland’s north-west shore is one of Britain’s enchanting beaches. Travel to its sands by strolling in from Blairmore car park, beside the broad trail that goes over the chalky meadow. You’ll go by the outrush of many bays, maybe utilising the walking rocks to go over the water, and a wrecked farmers house at the huge, non salty Sandwood Bay prior to the beach coming into your sights, also keep an eye out for dolphins here.
Helvellyn, England.
Difficulty: Average.
Distance: 7 miles, that’s about 11km.
Duration: 6 hours
So it isn’t England’s tallest summit, but there’s something charming about Helvellyn – and Wordsworth will surely agree, having described the mountain many times. The most famous course up is on the stony hill of Striding Edge which is approachable for many capable hikers and this also provides the straightest entry to the peak. Otherwise, hike the less challenging and less revealing Swirral Edge; anyhow this would be your path back down. The peak comes as a shock to many – it’s next to an almost levelled highland that watched Britain’s initial mountaintop plane landing and takeoff back in 1926. Permit six hours for the seven-mile round tour to the peak, and don’t even think about climbing during bad climates.
Stanage Edge, England.
Difficulty: Average.
Distance: 9 miles, that’s around 14.5km.
Duration: 6 hours.
Stanage Edge in the Peak Region might be one of the UK’S most famous hiking sites, but there’s lots of for walkers as well, such as a nine-mile, about six-hour stroll bordering the gravel ridges on a noose out from Hathersage car park. You’ll hike Jacob’s Ladder to get to the hilltop prior to walking across pass gray plains and gravels with Yorkshire on one portion, and Derbyshire on the other part. From the ridge border trail out to Crow Chin you’ll see various rock hikers, and also the Derwent and Hope dales and the summit of Kinder Scout.
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chriskarrtravelblog · 5 years ago
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Regional guide to the Peak District
From heathery moors to rolling hills and underground caverns, the Peak District is home to some of the most majestic landscapes in the country
In the Peak District, heritage takes different forms. Britain is home to 15 National Parks, and the oldest of them is found right here. This much-loved swathe of the Midlands, covering some 555 square miles of dramatic hill terrain, was the very first National Park to be created, back in 1951. To many minds, it still belongs at the top of the pile.
Illustration: Michael Hill
But the history of the Peak District extends way beyond a mid-20th-century assignation. Neanderthal stone tools have been found in its caves, Bronze Age burial mounds still hunch on its ridges and the remnants of age-old hillforts litter its slopes. The Romans came here too, setting out roads and mining for lead, an abundant mineral which later brought fortune to local landowners. The end result is an area dotted with grand stately homes and ancient remains, all of them dwarfed by the wide-open wonders of the landscape itself.  
Looked at on the map, unfurled in the green space between Sheffield, Derby and Manchester, the region can be divided into two quite separate areas. The northern half of the National Park, sitting on gritstone rock and characterised by high areas of open moorland, is known as the Dark Peak. The southern half, formed of limestone and playing home to gentle dales, burbling rivers and ash woodland, is known as the White Peak.
Both are fascinating in their own right. The Dark Peak contains the iconic plateau of Kinder Scout, where a mass trespass of 500 walkers in 1932 led to a change in the laws regarding access rights, something the country as a whole still benefits from today. Of the two, however, it’s the White Peak which holds more appeal for the first-time visitor, not least because of the variety of its attractions. 
Many of these places of interest are manmade. The wider region contains history-rich market towns like Bakewell, home to the famed pudding of the same name, and Buxton, once a fashionable spa resort and still renowned for its spring water. You’ll also find fascinating little villages such as Eyam, famously cut off from the outside world by a 17th-century plague outbreak, and Youlgreave, one of many settlements that still practices well dressing, a local tradition of decorating wells with flowers and other natural materials a few weeks after Easter.
Dovedale is known for its stepping stones and meandering river. Credit: Alan Novelli/Alamy
Tucked among the Peak District’s rolling hills, meanwhile, are some of the finest stately homes in central England. Top of the list is surely spectacular Chatsworth House, where more than 100 acres of gardens surround a truly grand residence which has passed down through 16 generations of the Cavendish family. Its art collection alone – spanning four millennia – means it should be part of any Peak District itinerary, and Capability Brown himself had a hand in the layout of the gardens.
But Chatsworth is just the start. The region also holds the Elizabethan masterwork that is Hardwick Hall – where the windows are so numerous it’s often described as “more glass than wall” – and the crenellated medieval majesty of Haddon Hall, which has starred on screen in both Jane Eyre and Pride and Prejudice. Lyme Park, once a hunting lodge and still an imposing stately home, is another gem with extensive grounds.
By way of contrast to these mighty mansions rising from the land, the White Peak also has large-scale attractions underground. Poole’s Cavern near Buxton is home to vast subterranean chambers, and the show caves around the town of Castleton – so named for the ruined 11th-century castle that still stands here – provide more of the same.
Haddon Hall has been famous for its roses since Elizabethan times
Some of these, such as Treak Hill Cavern and Blue John Cavern, grant access to natural netherworlds of rare rock types and age-old stalactites and stalagmites. Others, including Speedwell Cavern and Peak Cavern – the latter, incidentally, also known as The Devil’s Arse – give insight into the underground industry and mining practices that have been a part of Peak District life for so long. 
The creator of Sherlock Holmes, Arthur Conan Doyle, was so impressed by the scale and extent of the mines and caves beneath the region that he pronounced “all this country is hollow – could you strike it with some gigantic hammer it would boom like a drum.” It’s known that the author once stayed at Castleton, and the fact that he later set a story in the area shows that the formations above ground made no less of an impression.
Not far from Castleton is the great shapely hill of Mam Tor, arguably the best-known summit in the National Park. Once the site of a hillfort, its 517-metre-high top can be reached with relative ease via a paved footpath. Being roughly at the centre of the entire region, it grants deep views in every direction. If you’re in the mood for continuing the walk, the Great Ridge carries on from Mam Tor, eventually rising to meet Lose Hill, a popular hike of around 2.5 miles each way.
Once a spa resort, Buxton is renowned for its spring water. Credit: Ian Hubball/Alamy
The Peak District is full of more challenging outdoor options, from the climbing hotspot of the Stanage Edge escarpment to long-distance treks such as the Pennine Way, which begins here in the mellow little village of Edale. If you’d rather sample the scenery in a more sedate manner, however, the options are just as numerous. 
The three adjoining reservoirs of Ladybower, Derwent and Howden offer miles of flat walking and cycling terrain, as well as the chance to encounter more history – the area was used for dummy trials of Professor Barnes Wallis’ famous ‘bouncing bomb’ in the Second World War, thanks to its physical resemblance to Germany’s Rühr dams. It later starred in the film The Dam Busters. 
Further south is picturesque Dovedale, a valley known for its stepping stones and meandering river. It draws plenty of visitors, but do make the effort to walk past the stepping stones, after which the crowds start to thin. And if you’d rather avoid the main flow of tourism altogether, the region has a whole host of quieter scenic valleys, among them Cressbrook Dale, Monk’s Dale and Peter Dale. Because that’s the thing with a place as broad and varied as the Peak District – it’s packed with attractions, but there’s also plenty of space to go round. Which, somewhere as handsome as this, can only be a good thing.
Getting there
The Peak District is easily reached by car, being around 3hr 15min from London, 1hr 30min from Birmingham and only an hour or so from Manchester. The National Park is also well served by bus and rail, with train stations at places such as Edale, Hope and Hathersage. nationalexpress.com; thetrainline.com
Where to stay
The Cavendish Hotel on the Chatsworth House estate offers finely furnished rooms and an excellent restaurant. The Peacock at Rowsley is a luxurious option near Bakewell with four-poster bedrooms and a fine-dining restaurant. Alstonefield Manor is a B&B with bags of charm, set in a country house on the hills above Dovedale. Expect fresh flowers, high-class decor and scones and tea on arrival. cavendishbaslow.co.uk; thepeacockatrowsley.com; alstonefieldholidaycottages.com    
Where to eat
An atmospheric 18th-century pub on the village green at Alstonefield, The George offers Michelin-recommended dining, thanks in part to having its own vegetable garden. Other local produce, such as Derbyshire beef, features heavily on the menu. thegeorgeatalstonefield.com
READ MORE: The Lake District: an insider’s guide
The post Regional guide to the Peak District appeared first on Britain Magazine | The official magazine of Visit Britain | Best of British History, Royal Family,Travel and Culture.
Britain Magazine | The official magazine of Visit Britain | Best of British History, Royal Family,Travel and Culture https://www.britain-magazine.com/features/guide-peak-district/
source https://coragemonik.wordpress.com/2019/10/01/regional-guide-to-the-peak-district/
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halley9772933653-blog · 6 years ago
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travelcenter-uk · 7 years ago
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Best Walking And Hiking Routes In The UK.
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Studland Village to Old Harry Rocks, England.
Difficulty: Easy.
Distance: 4 miles that’s about 6.5km.
Duration: 1 hour
The South West Coast Path passes over some stunning seaside countryside in England’s south-west – but the full course takes at least a month! Rather, test the small and uncomplicated four-mile part from Studland out to the penetrating white chalk piles of Old Harry Rocks. Glance across from here to the Isle of Wight – and Old Harry’s brother or sister the Needles – and look out for huge groups of wood pigeons on relocation. The track goes by the gates to the Pig on the Beach, which is certainly the ideal justification for a lunch stop in the extremely judged kitchen garden restaurant, book in advance though.
Mawddach Trail, Wales.
Difficulty: Easy.
Distance: 9.5 miles that’s around 15km.
Duration: 3 to 4 hours.
Unused railway tracks create the ideal walking path and this simple clearly marked track beside the southern border of the Mawddach delta makes for a light walk or also a bike ride from the bazaar town of Dolgellau between swamps and over the railway overpass at Barmouth. It’s 9.5 miles in full but could be compressed by two miles by connecting the track at Penmaenpool. Create time to relax and view the altering sands of the marsh – and watch out for all types of birds such as; pied flycatchers as well as wood warblers.
Sandwood Bay, Scotland.
Difficulty: Easy.
Distance: 8 miles, this means about 13km.
Duration: 4 to 5 hours.
With its lengths of golden sand mounds, sensational ridges and stone heaps away from the shoreline, Sandwood Bay on Scotland’s north-west shore is one of Britain’s enchanting beaches. Travel to its sands by strolling in from Blairmore car park, beside the broad trail that goes over the chalky meadow. You’ll go by the outrush of many bays, maybe utilising the walking rocks to go over the water, and a wrecked farmers house at the huge, non salty Sandwood Bay prior to the beach coming into your sights, also keep an eye out for dolphins here.
Helvellyn, England.
Difficulty: Average.
Distance: 7 miles, that’s about 11km.
Duration: 6 hours
So it isn’t England’s tallest summit, but there’s something charming about Helvellyn – and Wordsworth will surely agree, having described the mountain many times. The most famous course up is on the stony hill of Striding Edge which is approachable for many capable hikers and this also provides the straightest entry to the peak. Otherwise, hike the less challenging and less revealing Swirral Edge; anyhow this would be your path back down. The peak comes as a shock to many – it’s next to an almost levelled highland that watched Britain’s initial mountaintop plane landing and takeoff back in 1926. Permit six hours for the seven-mile round tour to the peak, and don’t even think about climbing during bad climates. 
Stanage Edge, England.
Difficulty: Average.
Distance: 9 miles, that’s around 14.5km.
Duration: 6 hours.
Stanage Edge in the Peak Region might be one of the UK’S most famous hiking sites, but there’s lots of for walkers as well, such as a nine-mile, about six-hour stroll bordering the gravel ridges on a noose out from Hathersage car park. You’ll hike Jacob’s Ladder to get to the hilltop prior to walking across pass gray plains and gravels with Yorkshire on one portion, and Derbyshire on the other part. From the ridge border trail out to Crow Chin you’ll see various rock hikers, and also the Derwent and Hope dales and the summit of Kinder Scout. 
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beyourowntailwind · 8 years ago
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First night beer search #studytour - - - #Cumbria #cumbriauniversity #ambleside #me #forestry #forestrymanagement #lowlandstudytour (at The Little John Hotel, Bar & Restaurant, Hathersage, Derbyshire)
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thegeorgehathersage · 1 month ago
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Stay Updated with the Latest News and Events at The George Hathersage
Keep up with the latest news and updates from The George Hathersage, including seasonal menus, special events like Afternoon Tea with Santa, and exciting reopening announcements. Whether you're planning a visit or curious about upcoming events, check out the updates for an unforgettable experience.
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thegeorgehathersage · 2 months ago
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Top10 Tips for Choosing the Perfect Restaurant for Any Occasion
Discover the top 10 tips for selecting the ideal restaurant for any occasion, from family-friendly venues to fine dining in Hathersage. Learn how to consider menu options, atmosphere, and service to make your meal memorable. Book a table at The George and create lasting memories with your loved ones.
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thegeorgehathersage · 3 months ago
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Discover The George Hathersage: Legendary Food, Drink, and Hospitality in the Peak District
Experience the charm of The George in Hathersage, a contemporary coaching inn nestled in the heart of Derbyshire's Peak District. Enjoy legendary food and drink, warm local hospitality, and stylish boutique bedrooms in a beautifully restored 500-year-old building. Visit The George for a relaxed and memorable stay in Hope Valley.
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thegeorgehathersage · 5 months ago
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Reserve Your Table at The George Hathersage for an Unforgettable Dining Experience
Book your table at The George Hathersage and enjoy a delightful dining experience in the heart of Derbyshire's Peak District. Whether you're planning a romantic dinner, family meal, or special event, our easy online reservation system ensures a hassle-free booking. Experience gourmet cuisine and warm hospitality. Reserve your table today.
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thegeorgehathersage · 5 months ago
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Gourmet Delights Farm-to-Table Dining in Hathersage at The George
Discover farm-to-table dining in Hathersage at The George. Enjoy fresh, locally sourced ingredients and seasonal menus that highlight the best of Derbyshire's produce. Savour dishes crafted with care and sustainability in mind. Book your table at The George now and experience gourmet delights.
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thegeorgehathersage · 2 years ago
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Nestled in the idyllic Hope Valley in the heart of the Peak District National Park, the charming village of Hathersage offers a delightful treat for all food lovers. With a rich cultural heritage, Hathersage is well-known for its vibrant dining scene, blending traditional British cuisine with contemporary gastronomy. From local delicacies to some of the finest restaurants, this food lover's guide will take you on a culinary journey through this charming village. Read to know more.
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thegeorgehathersage · 1 year ago
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About The George | Food And Drink Available
The George at Hathersage provide brilliant food and drinks, specially prepared by our in-house chef. The George’s doors are open 365 days a year for food, drinks and overnight stays. The venue has been opened up with a contemporary restaurant, relaxing lounge area and buzzy bar. We welcome well behaved dogs in the pub area, who will always be greeted with a treat from our canine loving team. Check out more details about The George.
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thegeorgehathersage · 1 year ago
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Stay informed with the latest happenings at The George and other esteemed venues under the management of Longbow Bars & Restaurants. From introducing creative culinary innovations to hosting engaging events, our establishments consistently offer a blend of superior dining experiences and vibrant social atmospheres.
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