Sun And Shadow At The Top Of The Town

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Yesterday we had sun. We did! And a fine afternoon it was for a short tramp up and round the town.

As you can see, Bishop’s Castle is on a steep hill. The header view shows the High Street below the Town Hall. We’re around half way up the hill.

Now I’m walking you backwards, past the Town Hall, past Bamber’s elephant mural into the Market Square, and crossing Salop Street.

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And now I’m turning  you right around to look up Bull Street:

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And we’re still not at the top.

Bull Street leads to Bull Lane. If we look right and downhill, there’s a fine view of farm fields, doubtless winter wheat and oil seed rape.

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But we’re not going down, but left and up to the crossroads where Bull Lane meets Castle Street, Wintles Lane and Montgomery Road.

Now we’re at the top of the town, by the blue house that is growing a fine shadow tree:

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And in the shade, on the house wall opposite, a tribute to our two local Morris dance teams, the Shropshire Bedlams and Martha Rhoden’s Tuppenny Dish

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At the crossroads it’s decision time – to go left and back into town via Castle Street (where there is no castle, only some ground it once sat on and some more good views):

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Or cross the road into Wintles Lane:

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If you want to see the elephant sculpture, then you need to take the Wintles Lane option and follow the footpaths on the right. And climb another hill:

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It’s also worth clambering up here for the view of the Long Mynd.

And from here, too,  you can turn about and look down on the town. A fine spot on Planet Earth:

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November Shadows #18

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38 thoughts on “Sun And Shadow At The Top Of The Town

  1. I enjoyed the walk with you especially as I can’t do much walking at the moment due to an inconvenient knee! Love the elephant and the view from there – lovely fog in the valley.

    1. Ah, the elephant connection. There are lots of ele images about the town – and all down to the fact an Indian (circus) elephant (or maybe more) was (were) evacuated for safety to the Castle Hotel’s then stables during WW2. There’s a tiny film clip on YouTube of one being exercised along the lanes.

      The other connection is Clive of India – he who rose from a modest clerical position in the East India company to make a fortune. He came to live near Bishop’s Castle – and his dynasty did some roost-ruling when it came to politics, Bishop’s Castle being an infamous Rotten Borough. Clive’s acquired family crest included an Indian elephant. We still have a stone carved example in the Market Square. It came off the demolished market hall that the Clive family built. I’m thinking of featuring it in Jude’s bench series.

    1. Considering it’s composed of small metal plates it’s extraordinarily realistic. The creator one Ben Ashton. I’ve not been able to find anything about him. Their are other sculptures about the town – a life size wart hog and offspring in a garden down the road.

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