Last week’s trip up to Yorkshire was
the first holiday in the UK,
of more than a few days, that the Bailey family have had in years. It was my
dear lady wife who said this to me at the start of the long drive back from
Bridlington last Friday, and looking back, she was right.
For the past few years we’ve holidayed as a family, in
foreign parts, and probably would have done so this year, had it not been for
Mrs PBT’s hospitalisation, earlier in the year. But having just done so, I have
to admit it was much easier to just jump in the car and drive direct to our
holiday destination without the hassle of airports and buses.
My wife certainly thought so, particularly as she didn’t
fancy lugging suitcases around and dealing with the queues at security and
passport control. Then there’s the bit when you re herded around like cattle,
as you wait for the bus to take you from the car park to the terminal, and
sometimes there’s another bus to take you to and from the plane.
Being relatively fit, these inconveniences don’t bother me
that much; although my recent trip to the US
involved five flights and no doubt seriously increased my carbon footprint for
the year. It therefore made sense to take a holiday on home turf, and with Mrs
PBT’s still recuperating after a nasty, and very nearly fatal illness, these facts had to be weighed up and
taken very seriously.
Of course, airports provide assistance with both boarding and disembarkation, and this is
an option we may well look at for next year, but as I said at the beginning, it
was much easier to travel by car, as it was literally door to door.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/en:Creative_Commons |
First and foremost was crossing the Humber
Bridge, between Yorkshire
and Lincolnshire, whilst marvelling
at both the stunning views and the incredible engineering which went into the
bridge’s construction.
This was followed, some time afterwards by glimpsing the
huge bulk of Lincoln Cathedral,
striking an imposing silhouette against the horizon. I’m no stranger to
Lincoln, having been a frequent visitor to the city back in the early 1980’s,
but views like that still inspire, and instill a sense of awe when one takes
into account the primitive tools and equipment the builders of these structures
had at their disposal.
Apart from a brief business trip eight years ago, last
week’s jaunt to Yorkshire
was my first visit to the county in 36 years. So had the place changed much? The simple answer is yes it has changed, but only as much as
the rest of the country has, and to confuse the issue further, the parts of
Yorkshire we visited were different from those I’d been to before.
The fact that Mrs PBT’s has relatives in the county added to our visit, as local knowledge is always welcome, and it was also good to see how the other half live. I should add that I mean that in a positive, rather than a disparaging way.
The fact that Mrs PBT’s has relatives in the county added to our visit, as local knowledge is always welcome, and it was also good to see how the other half live. I should add that I mean that in a positive, rather than a disparaging way.
I’ve already written about our visit to Haworth,
and how that was enhanced by having someone who’d lived there acting as our
guide, but it was also good to go out and do a bit of exploring on our own.
This we did in the form of our visit to Saltaire, but for reasons of
expediency, our evening drinking tended to take place at the pub attached to
the Premier Inn, where we were staying.
Fortunately the single choice of Doom Bar at the Dalesway Brewer’s
Fayre outlet on our first night, was supplemented by some very drinkable Black
Sheep Best Bitter on subsequent evenings;, although I would still have
preferred my pint NOT to have been pulled through a sparkler!
As is so often the case, we found the best pub on the last
evening of our stay. The Airedale Heifer, situated in the village
of Sandbeds, between Crossflatts
and Riddlesden, was only 15 minutes walk from our hotel, so it was doubly
annoying to have been so close to good beer and a good pub without realising
it. (Actually I did spot it on WhatPub, but that’s another story).
On Wednesday evening we’d arranged to meet up with Mrs PBT’s
relatives for a meal at the pub, and being a good and supportive husband, I
drove us there. This substantial roadside pub is named after the famous
Airedale Heifer, which was recorded as
the heaviest cow in the UK
during the early 1800s.
The Airedale Heifer
is run by the Bridgehouse Brewery, and with the brew-house situated in an
outbuilding behind the pub, serves as the brewery tap. With a good food
offering and a number of different Bridgehouse
Ales on tap, the Heifer is understandably popular with locals and visitors
alike.
We enjoyed an excellent and reasonably priced roast dinner
at the pub, washed down with a very quaffable pint of Bridgehouse Blonde. NBSS
3.0, and I would definitely recommend calling in, if you ever find yourself in
the Crossflats – Riddlesden area of West Yorkshire.
The following morning, we left for Bridlington via the moors,
the Vale of York and the Wolds, and that is worthy of
another post.