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Sites Anne T has logged on trip number: 170 (View all trips)
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Hall Well (Tissington)
Trip No.170 Entry No.1 Date Added: 11th Aug 2021
Site Type: Holy Well or Sacred Spring
Country: England (Derbyshire)
Visited: Yes on 15th Jul 2021. My rating: Condition 4 Ambience 4 Access 5

Hall Well (Tissington) submitted by Creative Commons on 6th May 2013. Dressing of Hall Well - Tissington 2010
Copyright Mick Lobb and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence.
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Log Text: Hall Well, Tissington: We have been to Tissington before, on a Well Dressing weekend, a long, long time ago (about 38 years!), but because of the sheer number of visitors and really only interested in seeing the church, we took a quick look around only. This time, we walked round to see the wells in their 'ordinary' state. There was a large number of visitors again, but no-one else seemed particularly interested in the wells. It being a very, very hot and humid day, we were grateful for the cafe being open, although the queues to get ice-cream from the traditional sweet shop were horrendous, so we gave up.
I picked up a leaflet in the main cafe which showed the location of the wells, which made locating them easy.
A very pleasant village, and well worth visiting. Would have liked to have spent longer.
Yew Tree Well
Trip No.170 Entry No.2 Date Added: 11th Aug 2021
Site Type: Holy Well or Sacred Spring
Country: England (Derbyshire)
Visited: Yes on 16th Jul 2021. My rating: Condition 4 Ambience 3 Access 5

Yew Tree Well submitted by Creative Commons on 6th May 2013. Dressing of Yew Tree Well - Tissington 2010
The last day of the various dressings and colours have faded but do not detract to the effort that goes into dressing of the wells in the village.
Copyright Mick Lobb and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence.
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Log Text: Yew Tree Well, Tissington: The second well of the day. We walked down The Street from Hall Well (with the cafe to our right hand side and church to our left), turning left into Narlow Street. This well is almost at the entrance to the Candle Workshop, underneath a tall, but relatively young Yew Tree.
There was water in the well basin, but nothing seemed to be flowing into or out of the well, or along the drainage channel at the front of it, at the time of our visit.
Town Well
Trip No.170 Entry No.3 Date Added: 11th Aug 2021
Site Type: Holy Well or Sacred Spring
Country: England (Derbyshire)
Visited: Yes on 16th Jul 2021. My rating: Condition 4 Ambience 3 Access 4

Town Well submitted by Creative Commons on 6th May 2013. Dressing of Town Well - Tissington 2010
The designs are laid out on a frame with stretched sacking to which is applied wet mud into which the decoration is applied. The week saw warm dry weather that dried out the mud which cracked like the dried up bed of a lake. This photograph shows deterioration of the dressing on the final display day.The next day the display was removed.
Copyright Mick Lobb and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence
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Log Text: Town Well, Tissington: Our third well out of the six in the village. From Yew Tree Well, we headed east along The Green, past the pond (which had very cute young ducklings being taught to swim by their parents). The well is just to your left hand side at the far side of the green.
Coffin Well
Trip No.170 Entry No.4 Date Added: 11th Aug 2021
Site Type: Holy Well or Sacred Spring
Country: England (Derbyshire)
Visited: Yes on 16th Jul 2021. My rating: Condition 2 Ambience 2 Access 5

Coffin Well submitted by AngieLake on 12th Feb 2007. The beautiful clay-based panel of dried flowers and seeds creating this artistic well-dressing at the Coffin Well in 2003.
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Log Text: Coffin Well, Tissington: Finding this well was pretty tricky, as even with the leaflet showing the location of all the wells in Tissington, we walked up and down, and down and up a lane called 'The Foot'. Eventually, I realised that whoever was in the cottage had parked their car right across the front of the well, with the front passenger tyre almost in the well itself. I had to do contortions, avoiding the bonnet of the car, to get any photograph at all.
Presumably the main part of the well is behind the garden wall, in the private garden. The gate to the cottage had a sign which said 'no entry' or 'strictly private', and I was reluctant to knock on the front door and seek permission.
Not impressed by the parking, and no sign to say this was the well.
Children's Well
Trip No.170 Entry No.5 Date Added: 12th Aug 2021
Site Type: Holy Well or Sacred Spring
Country: England (Derbyshire)
Visited: Yes on 16th Jul 2021. My rating: Condition 3 Ambience 3 Access 5

Children's Well submitted by Creative Commons on 6th May 2013. Dressing of Children's Well - Tissington 2010
Rather a macabre sentiment from children I would think.
Copyright Mick Lobb and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence.
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Log Text: Children's Well, Tissington: The fifth well we visited in the village, and easy to spot. Not recorded on HE or HERR. The basin within the well head was slightly muddy and dry, but looking over the dry stone wall, there is a boggy area of ground, which is where the water appears to rise, and a stone trough just behind the well head, which was full of water.
Hands Well
Trip No.170 Entry No.6 Date Added: 12th Aug 2021
Site Type: Holy Well or Sacred Spring
Country: England (Derbyshire)
Visited: Yes on 16th Jul 2021. My rating: Condition 3 Ambience 3 Access 5

Hands Well submitted by Creative Commons on 6th May 2013. Hands Well dressing and cottage - Tissington 2010
Copyright Mick Lobb and licensed for reuse under the Creative Commons Licence.
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Log Text: Hands Well, Tissington: The sixth, and final, well marked on the Tissington village leaflet map, and looked like a large, stone cotton-reel. As we approached it, some people were dipping their hands into the water. There was no flow of water into the basin, although the water appeared fresh and clear.
All Saints (Bradbourne)
Trip No.170 Entry No.7 Date Added: 12th Aug 2021
Site Type: Ancient Cross
Country: England (Derbyshire)
Visited: Yes on 16th Jul 2021. My rating: Condition 3 Ambience 4 Access 4

All Saints (Bradbourne) submitted by TimPrevett on 13th May 2007. The remains of the Anglo Saxon cross shaft at Bradbourne, which until quite recently formed parts of a stile... nice, but has not faired as well as that at Eyam.
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Log Text: All Saints, Bradbourne: Our last visit of this holiday. We had a very 'interesting' journey to Bradbourne, as the police had closed off the main road and routed all traffic down some very minor, single track roads, in which traffic was trying to move in both directions, and not succeeding, which was very frustrating.
There is a large parking area outside the church, although the actual entrance to the churchyard was a bit tricky to find, as there were a number of entrances to different driveways, and we ended up walking down one of these by accident.
The first cross is just inside the churchyard, to your right as you enter from the south. The sundial is just a little further to the north-north-east.
We missed the second cross within the churchyard, as we didn't have access to the HE website at the time of our visit, and whilst looking around, thought it was just another grave marker, so I didn't photograph it.
Loved the carving on the door into the south side of the tower.
Whilst there, a couple of other visitors were very keen for us to see the grave of actor Alan Bates ("Who?" I asked, to much disgust on their part), so we did wander round to find it, out of curiosity.