#ScenicSaturday August 24th 2024: 

This continuing series of posts depicts our beautiful world, encouraging people to share them and maybe even help save our unique home planet from human carelessness and indifference.

Today’s photo was taken at the edge of the small market town of Driffield in East Yorkshire. It shows Cadger Lane, in existence certainly since 1642, and probably a lot longer, now part of a public footpath linking the larger town with the smaller settlement of Little Driffield, a route we used to walk regularly when we lived in the area.

A Cadger was an agent for the Mills, and this lane led from the place where the mills were sited out to Elmswell and Garton on the Yorkshire Wolds, a rural area of quietly beautiful land much neglected by many walkers. It was almost certainly also used as a drovers’ lane to walk livestock from farms to the markets.

The countryside here is quite flat, but there are some low, rolling hills. Much of the land is used for growing crops and grazing sheep and cattle. It makes for pleasant walks in peace and tranquillity much of the time.

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Please do comment, like, and/or share these posts to spread the joy of natural beauty to reach as many people as we can. It could help us save the environment.

I post every Saturday here, but also share a different picture of natural beauty at the end of most days, with the hashtag , on FaceBook, Threads, Instagram, and on BlueSkySocial. Join me there, and on LinkedIn.

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6 thoughts on “#ScenicSaturday August 24th 2024: 

  1. Pingback: Reblog: #ScenicSaturday August 24th 2024: | In the Net! – Pictures and Stories of Life

    1. I agree, it does have an air of fantasy about it, Lynette. Locals use it all the time, and we used to enjoy it as it takes walkers from one part of the countryside to another avoiding a major road. It’s particularly ‘mystical’ in mist or when frosty.

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    1. I never saw anyone working on this green structure the entire time we used it as part of our walks in the area, Noelle, so I guess it was kept open simply by constant use. In its early years, it would’ve been kept clear by the livestock being driven along it, I assume.

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