Walks of the uk

Walks of the uk Scenic Steps began as Walks of the UK and The Walking Craftsman. Every image is mine.

I stepped back after facing negativity—but now I’m rebuilding with purpose: mapped walks, original photography, and storytelling rooted in local landscapes.

🌿 Family Freindly Sunday : Staveley Nature Reserve — Autumn Wildlife, Wetland Texture & Quiet GritToday’s walk took me t...
26/10/2025

🌿 Family Freindly Sunday : Staveley Nature Reserve — Autumn Wildlife, Wetland Texture & Quiet Grit

Today’s walk took me through the reclaimed wetlands of Staveley Nature Reserve, a 79-hectare site once used for gravel extraction, now restored and managed by the Yorkshire Wildlife Trust. Since 2002, it’s become a haven for birds, wildflowers, fungi, and quiet walking routes stitched with lakes, reedbeds, and grazing pasture.

🦢 Wildlife & Waterfowl:
- Mute Swan (Cygnus olor) — gliding and preening
- Tufted Duck (Aythya fuligula) — yellow eye, dark plumage
- Canada Goose (Branta canadensis) — shoreline presence
- Chaffinch (Fringilla coelebs) — leaf scatter
- Chicken — likely Rhode Island Red or ISA Brown

🐴 Livestock:
- Chestnut Horse — possibly Welsh Cob or New Forest Pony
- Dark-Coated Horse — likely Friesian or Dales Pony
- Highland Cow — long reddish coat, curved horns

🍄 Fungi & Plant Interactions:
- Hypholoma fasciculare or Coprinellus micaceus — dense brown clusters
- Robin’s Pincushion Gall — red hairy gall on wild rose

🌸 Flora:
- Cattails, Purple Loosestrife, Meadowsweet, Marsh Marigold
- Bird’s-foot Trefoil, Knapweed, Oxeye Daisy
- Blackthorn — heavy with sloe berries
- Reeds & Rushes — lining the lagoons

🧭 Terrain:
Flat, easy-access paths loop around East and West Lagoons. Grazing sheep and cattle help manage the land. Over 230 plant species and 200+ bird species have been recorded here.

📸 Scenic Steps 2025©

🍄 Solo Saturday — Mapped Fungi Hunt & Natural RemediesToday’s walk took me deep into Stainburn Forest, threading through...
25/10/2025

🍄 Solo Saturday — Mapped Fungi Hunt & Natural Remedies

Today’s walk took me deep into Stainburn Forest, threading through the quiet grit of Norwood Edge Plantation, hunting for one thing: Fly Agaric.

I’ve got three herniated discs in my lower back, and while walking helps ease the pain, I’m currently on a 50-week waiting list for my next RFA surgery — where they burn the nerves to keep the pain at bay. It works, but the nerves regrow, and the cycle starts again.

So I’ve turned to nature.

I’m a big believer in natural remedies, and Fly Agaric, when properly dried and prepared, can be infused into oils and made into balms. These balms have been used in folk medicine to:

- Ease nerve pain and muscle tension
- Soothe inflammatory skin conditions like eczema and psoriasis
- Stimulate microcirculation and reduce post-exertion fatigue

Today I found a stunning specimen — along with puffballs, bracket fungi, and boletes. All sponsor-safe, all filmed and documented for Scenic Steps.

⚠️ Note: I forgot to switch off my route tracker, so if anyone follows the walk, it loops back to the Norwood Edge Car Park where I started. Just follow the gravel track behind the info board — it’s stitched with mapped solitude and fungi-threaded grit.

And to top it off, this arrived in the post today:
📚 The Forager’s Calendar by John Wright — a seasonal guide to nature’s wild harvests. It’s vivid, practical, and already sparking mapped ideas for future balm prep, foraging threads, and legacy posts.

Solo Saturday stitched with mapped clarity, resilience, and a reminder:
If you’re walking through pain, keep walking. Nature’s mapped with remedies — and sometimes, the answer grows right beneath your feet.

📸 Scenic Steps 2025©

Route link in the comments

My new book has arrived 😍 Can't wait to see what I can find on my walks                fans
25/10/2025

My new book has arrived 😍

Can't wait to see what I can find on my walks



fans

🟣 Feature Friday: 421 Miles for GrandadThis Feature Friday isn’t about a new walk — it’s about the legacy of every mappe...
24/10/2025

🟣 Feature Friday: 421 Miles for Grandad

This Feature Friday isn’t about a new walk — it’s about the legacy of every mapped step I’ve already taken.

Over the past year, I’ve walked 421 miles in memory of my grandad — completing the Yorkshire Three Peaks 13 times in 12 months, and the full Dales High Way in reverse. Every climb carried his name. Every descent stitched with purpose.

Next Wednesday 29th October — Stroke Awareness Day, I’ll be sending off the final donations to the Stroke Association.

We’ve raised £780 so far — just £220 to go to hit the mapped target of £1000.

If you’ve been meaning to donate, now’s the moment. This is the last post I’ll make about it — but the impact will keep walking.
Donation link in original post and on my page

Thank you for every ripple of support. Let’s finish this together.







24/10/2025

When your back meets the wall and everything feels shut, remember broken bricks make openings—shift your view, find the break, and you’ll move through it.

Thicket Thursday 🌿 | Baildon’s Quiet GritStarted from Jenny Lane car park, dropped down towards Tong Park Dam, then turn...
23/10/2025

Thicket Thursday 🌿 | Baildon’s Quiet Grit

Started from Jenny Lane car park, dropped down towards Tong Park Dam, then turned left into the woodland — moss-rich, fungi-laced, and stitched with mapped silence. Followed the trail through to Low Springs Farm, turned and walked along the bottom of the White House, then looped back across the lower flank of Baildon Moor to close the circuit.

Wildlife thread:
A squirrel stood upright on the path, alert and holding court. A moorhen skimmed the dam, red beak catching the light. A flock of migrating geese stitched the sky in formation. Redwings overhead, roe deer tracks near the woodland edge — mapped stillness in motion.

Fungi finds:
• Mycena galericulata — bonnet mushrooms on mossy logs, pale-stemmed and delicate
• Coprinellus micaceus — shimmering inkcaps near damp bark, often in tight clusters
• Hypholoma fasciculare — sulphur tufts stitched into shaded crevices, bitter-scented and vibrant

Caution:
Cows were right at the gate and stile I had to pass through. If walking with dogs, take extra care and keep leads short — mapped peace depends on mutual respect.

Route stats:
• Distance: 4.02 mi
• Time: 1h 51m
• Avg speed: 2.2 mph
• Total ascent: 525 ft
• Total descent: 499 ft

Why I share these walks:
To connect people with the local area — for those who love being out, and for those who can’t. My mapped routes on OS Maps give clarity and confidence to anyone unsure of where to go. Scenic Steps is stitched for walkers, wanderers, and those watching from home.

Scenic Steps 2025 📸©️

23/10/2025

🌫️ Thursday Clarity | Scenic Steps 2025

Let Thursday remind you: even in the fog, the path still exists.

📍 Calverley Woods – a quiet track through mist and memory
🖼️ Sepia-toned forest scene with bare trees and fallen leaves, where light filters through the fog

Some mornings don’t offer full clarity.
They offer quiet direction.
A reminder that even when the view is blurred, the way forward remains.

Let this image be your signal:
You don’t need perfect light.
You just need to keep walking.

Tag someone who’s walking through the fog and still moving forward

🌿 Wild Wednesday | Burley Moor Loop  Short loop, bold texture. Coldstone Beck carved its quiet line through moss-rich ba...
22/10/2025

🌿 Wild Wednesday | Burley Moor Loop

Short loop, bold texture. Coldstone Beck carved its quiet line through moss-rich banks while the gritstone summit scattered stone like memory. Aircraft dipped low overhead — slicing silence, adding contrast to the wild stillness below.

From the top, the views stretched wide — Leeds, Bradford, Harrogate, Denholme, all stitched into the horizon. Even the “golf balls” at Menwith Hill were visible — part of the RAF base and global surveillance network, their presence adding surreal contrast to the moor’s ancient stillness.

Heather swayed like it remembered something. One orange-brown cap tucked into the grass caught the light — likely Galerina marginata or Cortinarius sp.. Early fruiting, fragile, and untouchable. A reminder that not everything wild is meant to be held.

🪶 Wildlife Thread:
- Red Grouse sightings — first a female, mottled and low in the heather; later a male, bold with vivid red eyebrow combs, standing proud and watching
- Highland Cow — horns curved like legacy, watching from behind the wire with quiet presence
- Swaledale Sheep — one chewing, one marked, both grounded in the moor’s rhythm and stitched into the land’s story

📜 History Thread:
Burley Moor sits on the edge of Rombalds Moor, rich in prehistoric remains — cup-and-ring marked stones, burial cairns, and ancient trackways. Near Coldstone Beck, scattered rocks may mark a Bronze Age cairn or prehistoric walling. The moor has seen everything — from ancient rituals to Victorian grouse shooting, and now, legacy walks stitched with clarity.

📌 Route recorded on OS Maps — link in the comments.

If you enjoy daily walks, wildlife photography, mapped quotes, and moments of peace stitched into excellent views — follow Scenic Steps. Every post is made to uplift, encourage, and connect those who walk, and those who wish they could.

A big Thanks from roxy and me  for being a top engager and making it on to our weekly engagement list! 🎉 Paweł Karczewsk...
22/10/2025

A big Thanks from roxy and me for being a top engager and making it on to our weekly engagement list! 🎉 Paweł Karczewski, Adams Ventures, Jane Crispin, Mark Battensby, Brandon Evans, Heo Yoonhee, Cristiane Foganholi, Derek Clark, Tony Kiely, Przemysław Jabłecki

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