j is for jaggerman* |
my mother and Muffet on Exmoor |
My mother was mad about packhorse trails. And I mean mad. ‘Shall we go for a ride?’ was not an invitation wise people accepted lightly since it often meant upwards of thirty miles in the saddle, scrambling over unmapped hill and uncharted dale, picking over lethal bogs, fording swollen rivers, getting lost, getting found, being miserable in the drizzle or burning in the sun. On one occasion we had to jump over a pig. The horses loved it (except for the pig). My father did not: Parisian restaurants were more his thing (still are). But my mother’s madness had a purpose, which was to rediscover, remap and re-open all the trails used by packhorses over the centuries. The alternative was to lose them behind fencing and ‘F-OFF’ signs, or equivalent. My mother was having none of that.
singing ringing tree at Crown Point |
I know for a fact that it’s always blowing a gale where the Langfield Long Causeway rises to Stoodley Pike, just above Hebden Bridge; that the horse able to trot all the way from Walk Mill to Crown Point must be fitter than any flea; that whatever the weather, man and beast are equally grateful for the watertroughs at Mankinholes; and that feeling you’ll die if you don’t get home soon doesn’t mean you actually will.
watertroughs at Mankinholes |
There was something very special about those long, rough rides. They were not, let me say quickly, a chance for a mother/daughter talk. My mother was far too busy gleaning information from Ancient Creatures in tumbled farms untouched since the Flood, and the going was usually too untrustworthy.
In any case, on these adventures her horse, Miss Muffet, a sparkling brilliant creature on whom I based Hosanna in the de Granville Trilogy, was her real companion - Muffet and the ghosts of the jaggermen and packanimals whose leather or iron shod feet had, over the centuries, worn the causeway stones to treachery.
Stoodley Pike |
In any case, on these adventures her horse, Miss Muffet, a sparkling brilliant creature on whom I based Hosanna in the de Granville Trilogy, was her real companion - Muffet and the ghosts of the jaggermen and packanimals whose leather or iron shod feet had, over the centuries, worn the causeway stones to treachery.
solid going |
My mother loved the tracks for their importance to the living and their value to the dead. For the living, particularly for riders of horses, they offered an escape from the tarmac road into wild country where the world looks quite different. As for the dead, she liked nodding to the long trails of horses, panniers creaking and bells jangling to the plodding rhythm of old-world commerce.
not such solid going |
packhorse bridge at Wycoller Emily Bronte based Thrushcross Grange in Wuthering Heights on the hall |
my mother's memorial stone |
* packhorse driver
the Mary Towneley loop, named after my mother |
Thornber, T. (2002) Seen on the Packhorse Trails, Todmorden: The South Pennine Packhorse Trails Trust
images from the web, apart from my mother and Muffet