Places to see in ( Congleton - UK )
Places to see in ( Congleton - UK )
Congleton is a town and civil parish in the unitary authority of Cheshire East and the ceremonial county of Cheshire, England. Congleton lies on the banks of the River Dane, 21 miles south of Manchester and to the west of the Macclesfield Canal.
The town of Congleton is broken up by the Congleton townspeople into seven main areas. These are Buglawton, otherwise known as Bug Town; the Bromley Farm estate, otherwise known as Tin Town due to the number of tin RSJs built there; Mossley, which is sometimes classed as the wealthier part of town; Hightown, which is located before Mossley between town and the railway station; West Heath, which is a relatively new estate built in the early 1960s to the early 1980s; Lower Heath to the north of the town; and finally the town centre.
Congleton is located in a river valley (the River Dane). To the south of the town lies an expanse of green space known locally as Priesty Fields that forms a green corridor right into the heart of the town – a rare feature in English towns.
The National Trust Tudor house Little Moreton Hall is four miles (6.4 km) southwest of the town. Congleton is home to one of the oldest recorded rugby union clubs in the country, dating back to 1860, although there have been periods when the club were not able to field a side.
There is also a local football team, Congleton Town F.C., known as the Bears, who play in the North West Counties League. Their ground is at Booth Street. There are also two cricket clubs, Congleton CC and Mossley CC. There are two golf clubs in the town; the historic Congleton Golf Club which is an undulating nine-hole course with views over the Cloud End, and the 18-hole parkland course at Astbury. There is also a running club, Congleton Harriers, which meets weekly at Congleton Leisure Centre.
Congleton Park is located along the banks of the River Dane just north east of the town centre. Town Wood on the northern edge of the park is a Grade A Site of Biological Interest and contains many nationally important plants. Congleton Paddling Pool was built in the 1930s and is open in the summer months. Astbury Mere Country Park lies just to the south west of the town centre, on the site of a former sand quarry. The lake is used for fishing and sailing and despite its name, is actually in the West Heath area of Congleton, with the boundary between Congleton and Newbold Astbury parishes lying further to the south.
Congleton Museum is on Market Square in the centre of town. It was established in 2002 and is dedicated to Congleton's industrial history. It also contains an ancient log boat and gold and silver coin hoards. Congleton is seven miles (11 km) east of the M6 motorway, connected by the A534.
Congleton railway station opened on 9 October 1848. It lies on the Manchester to Stoke-on-Trent branch of the West Coast Main Line. It was revealed in The Sentinel newspaper on 7 September 2011. The Macclesfield Canal, completed in 1831, passes through the town. It runs 26 miles (42 km) from Marple Junction at Marple, where it joins the Upper Peak Forest Canal, southwards (through Bollington and Macclesfield), before arriving at Bosley.
( Congleton - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Congleton . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Congleton - UK
Join us for more :
Places to see in ( Marple - UK )
Places to see in ( Marple - UK )
Marple is a small town within the Metropolitan Borough of Stockport, in Greater Manchester, England. It lies on the River Goyt 9 miles southeast of Manchester, 9 miles north of Macclesfield and 4 miles southeast of Stockport.
Historically in Cheshire, the town lies along the Peak Forest Canal, containing the Marple Lock Flight and Marple Aqueduct. The Roman Lakes to the southeast of the town centre attracts anglers and walkers. Marple is served by two railway stations, Marple and Rose Hill, providing access to the rail network in Greater Manchester and beyond. It is also close by the Middlewood Way, a cycle path following the former Macclesfield, Bollington and Marple Railway line south from Rose Hill to Macclesfield.
In the early 1900s the town prospered from the success of cotton in nearby Stockport and Manchester; the canals in the area served as a link with other industrial towns. In 1936, Marple Urban District, at the time part of Cheshire, annexed from Derbyshire the parish of Ludworth and Mellor. Marple grew as a residential suburb of Stockport after the arrival of frequent bus and rail services in the 1920s.
The area, close to Derbyshire, covers just over 11 square miles (28 km2) of countryside, ranging from heavily wooded valleys to hill-top moorland. It rises from around 262 feet (80 m) above sea level at the River Goyt to 1,073 feet (327 m) at Cobden Edge. On a clear day it is possible to view the Beetham Tower in Manchester as well as the city centre, the Winter Hill TV transmitter and the surrounding counties of Cheshire, Derbyshire, Lancashire and West Yorkshire and the mountains of North Wales from the top of these hills.
Since 1932 Marple has had a cinema in a building designed in 1878 as a place of worship or refuge. The building was purchased in 1932 by the Marple Cinema Company and became the Regent Cinema. It remains open as one of the few independent cinemas in the UK. The town has two brass bands, the Marple Band and the Hawk Green (Marple) Band.
Marple is notable for its series of 16 canal locks, known as Marple Lock Flight, close to the village centre. The Peak Forest Canal skirts the village, north running alongside Marple Memorial Park and Brabyns Park until it reaches the Marple Aqueduct and on to Dukinfield Junction, and south towards Bugsworth Basin. Macclesfield Canal meets the Peak Forest Canal at Marple Junction, and heads towards Birmingham. The two canals form part of the Cheshire Ring canal system; the canals served as a vital link during the Industrial Revolution. Nowadays they provide an area of relaxation for walkers, anglers and boaters.
The Roman Lakes leisure complex is popular with walkers, anglers, nature lovers and horse riders. It is located in the valley bottom close to Strines. The area was named in the Victorian era as an attraction to tourists not because it had links with the Romans (also true of Roman Bridge, a packhorse bridge over the Goyt). In the area closest to the river there was a mill built by Samuel Oldknow; it is now ruined and overgrown.
Marple Hall is located close to where Marple Hall School now stands. The remains of the hall can be explored, though very little remains. The hall was the ancestral home of the Bradshaws and passed to the Isherwoods. The town lies along the A626, which runs between Glossop and Heaton Chapel. It has a junction in the centre of Marple with the B6101, which heads south to New Mills.
( Marple - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Marple . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Marple - UK
Join us for more :
BRITAIN’S BEST TRAIN: The GWR Pullman service “Royal Duchy” - London to Cornwall
WATCH: AZUMA: Britain’s NEW high speed train:
Special thanks to my incredible $5+ Patrons:
Christoph H
Henry Bollington
Abby Fitzpatrick
Neil Smith
Amber Watts
Sean Gorelik
Quintin Soloviev
Austin Matemba
Liam Doyle
Rachel Partridge
Bailey Courtney
Anonymous Donor (x2)
Join them on PATREON and support me:
Follow me on Snapchat: pauls_trips ¦
Follow me on Twitter: @pauls_trips ¦
Follow me on Instagram: paulstripreports ¦
Thanks for finding my video and pressing play!
This is, in my opinion, Britain’s best public train. With a full service Pullman restaurant, a first class carriage, classic HST diesel haulage and a trip into England’s riviera county, Cornwall, this is the real deal. This one’s called the Royal Duchy after the Duchy of Cornwall (the Duke himself is Prince Charles).
The only thing that could make this trip better was the weather! We start at Paddington and wend our way down the Great Western Main Line, past Exeter, the Dawlish sea wall, and Plymouth, and crossing the most iconic railway bridge in England - Brunel’s magnificent Royal Albert Bridge.
My journey took me to Newquay so I alighted here at Par for the branch line to take me there. The cost of the ticket? £38.00 in first class. The meal in the Pullman car? Well that was more than the ticket! Well worth it though and I STRONGLY recommend you take this train or another of GWR’s Pullmans (all the Pullman trains are here: if you can manage it.
Enjoy the report.
Oh, here’s the Realtimetrains link (it’s free to use and totally awesome):
PS: as a couple of you have pointed out, that's not the Dart river, but the Plym. My mistake!
Do you have any ideas for future trip reports? Something you've never seen on YouTube before? Why not suggest it to me in the comments? I read every single one!
Places to see in ( Marple - UK )
Places to see in ( Marple - UK )
Marple is a small town within the Metropolitan Borough of Stockport, in Greater Manchester, England. It lies on the River Goyt 9 miles southeast of Manchester, 9 miles north of Macclesfield and 4 miles southeast of Stockport.
Historically in Cheshire, the town lies along the Peak Forest Canal, containing the Marple Lock Flight and Marple Aqueduct. The Roman Lakes to the southeast of the town centre attracts anglers and walkers. Marple is served by two railway stations, Marple and Rose Hill, providing access to the rail network in Greater Manchester and beyond. It is also close by the Middlewood Way, a cycle path following the former Macclesfield, Bollington and Marple Railway line south from Rose Hill to Macclesfield.
In the early 1900s the town prospered from the success of cotton in nearby Stockport and Manchester; the canals in the area served as a link with other industrial towns. In 1936, Marple Urban District, at the time part of Cheshire, annexed from Derbyshire the parish of Ludworth and Mellor. Marple grew as a residential suburb of Stockport after the arrival of frequent bus and rail services in the 1920s.
The area, close to Derbyshire, covers just over 11 square miles (28 km2) of countryside, ranging from heavily wooded valleys to hill-top moorland. It rises from around 262 feet (80 m) above sea level at the River Goyt to 1,073 feet (327 m) at Cobden Edge. On a clear day it is possible to view the Beetham Tower in Manchester as well as the city centre, the Winter Hill TV transmitter and the surrounding counties of Cheshire, Derbyshire, Lancashire and West Yorkshire and the mountains of North Wales from the top of these hills.
Since 1932 Marple has had a cinema in a building designed in 1878 as a place of worship or refuge. The building was purchased in 1932 by the Marple Cinema Company and became the Regent Cinema. It remains open as one of the few independent cinemas in the UK. The town has two brass bands, the Marple Band and the Hawk Green (Marple) Band.
Marple is notable for its series of 16 canal locks, known as Marple Lock Flight, close to the village centre. The Peak Forest Canal skirts the village, north running alongside Marple Memorial Park and Brabyns Park until it reaches the Marple Aqueduct and on to Dukinfield Junction, and south towards Bugsworth Basin. Macclesfield Canal meets the Peak Forest Canal at Marple Junction, and heads towards Birmingham. The two canals form part of the Cheshire Ring canal system; the canals served as a vital link during the Industrial Revolution. Nowadays they provide an area of relaxation for walkers, anglers and boaters.
The Roman Lakes leisure complex is popular with walkers, anglers, nature lovers and horse riders. It is located in the valley bottom close to Strines. The area was named in the Victorian era as an attraction to tourists not because it had links with the Romans (also true of Roman Bridge, a packhorse bridge over the Goyt). In the area closest to the river there was a mill built by Samuel Oldknow; it is now ruined and overgrown.
Marple Hall is located close to where Marple Hall School now stands. The remains of the hall can be explored, though very little remains. The hall was the ancestral home of the Bradshaws and passed to the Isherwoods. The town lies along the A626, which runs between Glossop and Heaton Chapel. It has a junction in the centre of Marple with the B6101, which heads south to New Mills.
( Marple - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Marple . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Marple - UK
Join us for more :
Welcome to Poynton
Poynton is a small thriving Cheshire town with a village feel surrounded by beautiful countryside. It's only 10 miles from Manchester airport and easily within the Manchester commuter belt.
Poynton's recently regenerated village centre, with its quality shops and restaurants and plenty of free car parking, successfully combines its historic past as a small mining village with having one of the most modern and innovative Shared Space schemes in Europe.
Poynton really is an ideal place to visit, live, work, shop and play.
Poynton has so much to offer. Recreational walkways, cycle paths and bridleways have been formed along old colliery railway trackbeds linking to the Middlewood Way, the local canal network and the adjoining Peak District.
Poynton Park, with its large pool, is home to the famous Poynton Show every August and the Brookside Garden Centre houses a charming miniature railway that is always popular with children and adults alike.
Come and visit the Nelson Pit visitor centre and the award winning Anson Engine Museum, which besides being home to one of Europe's largest collections of combustion engines, tells the story of Poynton's mining heritage along with a huge scale model of the village as it was 100 years ago.
Discover Poynton in Cheshire and get a real flavour of what this thriving and regenerated town has to offer in this official Poynton Town Council video.
Ireland’s Cross-Border Express: Enterprise, FIRST PLUS: Dublin to Belfast
WATCH: AZUMA: Britain’s NEW high speed train:
Special thanks to my incredible $5+ Patrons:
Henry Bollington
Abby Fitzpatrick
Neil Smith
Amber Watts
Sean Gorelik
Quintin Soloviev
Robert Livingston
Vista Aviation
Ally Mullins
Rami A
Yasseen
Austin Matemba
Liam Doyle
Rachel Partridge
Bailey Courtney
Anonymous Donor (x2)
Join them on PATREON and support me:
Follow me on Snapchat: pauls_trips ¦
Follow me on Twitter: @pauls_trips ¦
Follow me on Instagram: paulstripreports ¦
More about the Enterprise:
The full menu:
Thanks for finding my video and pressing play!
In this video I take one of Europe’s forgotten trains - the Enterprise. This is the service connecting the two Irish capitals, Dublin in the Republic with Belfast in Northern Ireland. The journey takes around 2 hours and 15 minutes on the fastest weekday services.
This is an international train, as Northern Ireland is part of the UK. The open and invisible border between the two means our journey is seamless and easy, with no passport or customs checks needed.
First Plus - now seemingly also branded Enterprise Plus - is very comfortable indeed and is well patronised. In fact, on this trip there were a number of senior MLAs (members of Northern Ireland’s devolved Parliament) on board, though they aren’t pictured! One of the reasons this train feels roomy and comfortable is the fact that Irish trains run on a broader gauge - rails are five feet apart as opposed to European gauge used in Britain of four feet eight and a half inches.
Autumn and winter aren’t the best for filming - lots of reflections and it being dark outside made for a fair amount of unusable footage....argh.
For those of you who like to keep track of this sort of thing, yep - I took this journey immediately after my Newquay to Dublin flight with Aer Lingus!
Enjoy the report.
_____________________________________
Do you have any ideas for future trip reports? Something you've never seen on YouTube before? Why not suggest it to me in the comments? I read every single one!
Best Restaurants in Macclesfield, United Kingdom UK
Macclesfield Food Guide. MUST WATCH. We have sorted the list of Best Restaurant in Macclesfield for you. With the help of this list you can try Best Local Food in Macclesfield. You can select best Bar in Macclesfield.
And Lot more about Macclesfield Food and Drinks.
It's not the Ranking of Best Restaurants in Macclesfield, it is just the list of best Eating Hubs as per our user's ratings.
Don't forget to Subscribe our channel. Click on Bell ICON to get the notification of updates Immediately.
List of Best Restaurants in Macclesfield
Aristo
Henry's Cafe
Chestergate Bistro
Bacchus
Rustic Coffee Co
The Chocolate Box Cafe
Aquila
Peak View Restaurant & Tearoom
KANDY
The Salt Bar
PARIS to MILAN by train: Spectacular TGV through the Alps
WATCH: AZUMA: Britain’s NEW high speed train:
Help me out by buying something - anything! on Amazon through my referral link? Use this link as your entry point and browse...
Tip jar: (all money goes towards paying for MORE content!)
Featuring Nicolai Heidlas - Never Give Up courtesy of Hooksounds hooksounds.com
Ticket retailers:
Mega thanks to my current $5+ Patrons:
Cliff Hope, Ryan Wylde, Gunter Hanke, Anthony Crawford, Victor Petersen, Robert Stretton, Alexander Schoell, Peter Harrison, Stephen Newton, Ben Marcus, Natalie Napolitano, Daniel Westermann Strandby, Quintin Soloviev, Tore Morten, Henry Bollington, Mike Wooldridge, Anna Smith, Neil Smith, Doug Gard, David Mager, Laila Bergman, Dan, Joseph O'Brien, Jonathan O'Connor, DL James, Apmann Paul, Anonymous Donor, Steve Cooksley, Maulin Agrawal, David Hackett, Corne Adema, Bailey Courtney, Amber Watts, James Emery, Jose Nanin, Kodzo, Tom Freeborough, Steven Steffen, Phil Kitchen, Harald Evensen, Dirk Monson, Jack Gott, David F Bird, Jimmy Taylor, Jim Hawkins, Steve Carlson, Dominic Cozzi, Craig Colligan, Brendan J Becker, Jim Hastings, Gwailo Ang Mo, Alan Millar, Tomas Tandstad, Perry Howard, Andreas Pietsch, Lewis Whyte, Daniel Robinson, Greg Dash, Johnny Legg, Alexandre Huguet, John Brophy, Christer Whitworth, Ben Koo, Reint van Dijk, Paul Oates, Billy Smith, Philly Peter, James Patch, Robert Smith, Daniel Barrington-Garbutt, William Hyslop, Graham McKenzie, Will Phillips, Ricky Baptiste, Kyriakos Adamou, Paul Williams, Benjamin Hart, Rick Cornell, Oliver Brandt, Eric Weinmann , David Rivas-Liber, “abzy”, Alexander Hagen, Frazer Horswell, David Bowlus, Jake Evans, Wenrui Calvin Yu, Jos Bowmaster, Blake Prosch, Christopher Adams, Kevin Schlemmer, Chris Martin, beautyatyourtips.com, Damien Paul Croft, QFS Aviation, Scott Mulligan, Daniel Ferry, Nathan Moddison, Alan Maier, “Fan From Japan”, Joaquin Wells Doerr, Fahim Khair, Jean, John Clyde, David Miller, Simon Jordan, Jeff Ridder, Tim Stapersma, Zack Wischnia, Alan Gilchrist, Simon O, David Martin, Arthur Dent, Gary Walker, Killua, Brian Glas, Robert Farrugia, Mark Thompson, Stewart Stevenson, rc, Ardis Ostrom, Tracey Abel, Michael Holt, Tiezheng Bu
Join them on PATREON where you'll get perks like AD-FREE EARLY ACCESS viewing of all my trip report videos, my tips and tricks for hacking fares, my best of the month airfare rundown, and MORE...support me:
Follow me on Twitter: @paul_winginit ¦
Follow me on Instagram: paul_winginit ¦
My website: winginit.me
I hope you all enjoy this video, on SNCF's super TGV service to Milan. It's not the quickest, but it is definitely the most civilised and sublime way to get between France and Italy!
If you want to find out more about my future plans and join in conversations I have about travel, follow me on Twitter: @pauls_trips. I’ve started using it properly now and it would be great to see some of you there too.
Make sure you have your notifications set!
Nottingham City Center part30
Nottingham Castle
Flying with Scoot? Watch this first. (WORST airline of the year)
WATCH: AZUMA: Britain’s NEW high speed train:
Tip jar: (all money goes towards paying for MORE content!)
Mega thanks to my current $5+ Patrons:
Cliff Hope, Ryan Wylde, Gunter Hanke, Anthony Crawford, Victor Petersen, Robert Stretton, Alexander Schoell, Peter Harrison, Stephen Newton, Ben Marcus, Natalie Napolitano, Daniel Westermann Strandby, Quintin Soloviev, Tore Morten, Henry Bollington, Mike Wooldridge, Anna Smith, Neil Smith, Doug Gard, David Mager, Stephen James, Laila Bergman, Dan, Joseph O'Brien, Vesa Perttunen, Jonathan O'Connor, DL James, Apmann Paul, Anonymous Donor, Steve Cooksley, Patrick McBride, Maulin Agrawal, David Hackett, Corne Adema, Bailey Courtney, Amber Watts, James Emery, Jose Nanin, Kodzo, Tom Freeborough, Steven Steffen, Phil Kitchen, Harald Evensen, Braden Hinkle, Dirk Monson, Jack Gott, David F Bird, Jimmy Taylor, Jim Hawkins, Steve Carlson, Dominic Cozzi, Craig Colligan, Brendan J Becker, Jim Hastings, Gwailo Ang Mo, Ron Ortmeier, Alan Millar, Tomas Tandstad, Perry Howard, Andreas Pietsch, Lewis Whyte, Daniel Robinson, Adam Sutherland, Greg Dash, Johnny Legg, Alexandre Huguet, John Brophy, Roddy J Lau
Join them on PATREON where you'll get perks like AD-FREE VIEWING of all my trip report videos, my tips and tricks for hacking fares, my best of the month airfare rundown, and MORE...support me:
Follow me on Twitter: @pauls_trips ¦
Follow me on Instagram: paul_winginit ¦
My website: winginit.me
Date of Travel: JUNE 2018
Airline: Scoot
Livery: Scoot standard
Route: DMK-SIN
Aircraft: Boeing 787-8
Registration: 9V-OFB (Lickity-Split)
Flight Number: TR 869
Miles: 892
Airborne time: 2h05m
Notes: Ninth of 25 legs, round the world
Cost to book: £144 one way
If you want to find out more about my future plans and join in conversations I have about travel, follow me on Twitter: @pauls_trips. I’ve started using it properly now and it would be great to see some of you there too.
Make sure you have your notifications set!