My morning stroll takes me into Chipping Vale. On a four-mile walk deep in the Lancashire countryside, I don’t see a single cow in the fields.
Down the lane to Longridge House, their new sign is up.
There is a touch of Autumn to the isle of chestnut trees.
The renovations to the hotel are coming to a close. 
And then I’m in the fields. Mainly newly cut, looking very green against the backdrop of the Bowland Fells. 
But look closely, and there is an Industrial landscape developing on the farms. Large sheds are being built everywhere, presumably, but I may be wrong, for housing cattle. 
These industrial-scale sheds are transforming black Moss Farm.

Come back in six months and see the finished product. I walk on, rather mystified by the whole process and let my eyes take in the larger scene, first the Bowland Fells and then Longridge Fell. Nothing changes up there.

I’m heading for Knott Farm, which I have not visited since the farmer, whom I knew, died a few years ago. There are some of those new gates, but not many people come this way. 
The farmhouse has had some work done to it, but overall, the property looks abandoned and unloved. This was a living farm at one time in the same family for generations. The date stone says 1888.

I come out by the hard-working egg farm and cross straight over the main Chipping road and take fields and farm tracks to climb the lower slopes of Longridge Fell. 
The Sloes and Rose Hips are ripening fast, a bumper crop this year.
I have time for some blackberry picking. 
There is a footpath linking the farms lying halfway up the hill. It will have been used for many decades. The little clapper bridge is worn by the passage of countless feet and hooves.
And what a view from up at this modest elevation. But not an animal insight.
I link the footpaths and little lanes past the farms. 
Just for the record, in case AR is reading this, some farmers hang onto their vintage tractors. 
As I approach Little Town Farm, I realise all the cattle are under cover, hence my header photo. A huge square footage of sheds. The cows must be put out to graze from time to time, but the majority of the fields are cut for silage for winter, if not all year round, feeding. Four robotic machines do the milking of the 190 cows on this dairy farm.
This is a progressive farm agriculturally and has also diversified into a farm shop, a cafe, and a garden centre. The needs of modern farming. And they are busy today, so it must be successful.

Things are changing, but I’m still privileged to live on the edge of this glorious countryside and glad to have you along.
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There is always time for some tree hugging.




















I take that slight diversion to the top. An extra windproof layer is added while I gaze over to Yorkshire.. 









J




















The farmer sees fit to dump his waste in the field.






They seem to recognise it now after many visits, and once through the gate, they are off lead, chasing whatever scents they pick up. There are deer up here, possibly foxes and traces of other dogs to explore.Disappointing to see so many dog poo bags discarded in the first hundred yards. Time for a litter pick foray before things deteriorate and the morons think it the norm. I’m not sure when I will be able to get back up here as I can’t drive.
It’s a cold, breezy morning with the wind moaning through the trees. Even more have come down since my last visit, and some are precariously lodged against others, not the safest place to be in a gale.
Our usual round is giving the dogs a chance for some wild water swimming. Dogs don’t stay still for long for their portraits.



The fields around Blackmoss are studded with molehills; some look ginormous.



We part company at Sainsbury’s, and I return home after a decent and interesting ramble. It’s not been easy taking pictures on my phone one-handed.


And there is more further along.
I wrote recently about whether the plantation would survive my lifetime. Things are looking bleaker, and it may not survive your lifetime.













I hear the joyful cries of children long before I see them sledging down the field.



Around the corner, a friend, JD, is building a snowman for his grandchildren.
All jolly good fun.



It’s difficult to give an impression of the water’s power in a photo so I tried a video for better effect.
Instead of returning the same way I picked up an unmarked track near one of the little footbridges; this took me up the hillside towards Rydding’s Farm, where walkers aren’t exactly welcomed with “dogs running loose” signs.
I bypass them and take the farm track leading back to Birdy Brow. Looking back, a rather hazy Pendle Hill dominates as usual around these parts.
I hadn’t walked far for my first walk of 2025. I’m pleased to see my car hadn’t been washed away and drove carefully back over the high road, stopping only to view the floods below in Chipping Vale.














