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Last modified:
November 13, 2004
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A Driving Tour from
Helmsley through Pickering to Scarborough
Helmsley with it's
castle
is located on the west flank of the North Yorkshire Moors date back to the 12th
Century, the large market square has plenty of accommodation to help you visit
the Ryedale and into the moors
Leaving in an easterly direction on the road towards
Nawton a quite village with accommodation at the
Plumpton Court,
we detour from the main road to cross Hodge Beck in Kirk Dale, where St Gregory's Minster dates back to
before the Norman Conquest of 1066 when it had just been rebuilt. A Saxon sundial
on the Minster is rather unique, dividing the daylight hours of the day into
eight tides.
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Helmsley Cross
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After passing
through Kirkbymoorside
take a detour north to Hutton-le-Hole
and the Ryedale Folk Museum which has a functioning glass Kiln and Blacksmiths
shop depicting local life during the past five Centuries. It is a quiet 17th
Century village where the beck flows through the middle of the thatched stone
houses with open grazing for the sheep.
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Hutton-le-Hole
Turning back towards
Pickering to Lastingham where the Benedictine monks built the Original Church in
the 11th Century, although altered and rebuilt the original crypt remains intact
below the present church.
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 Lastingham
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Pickering an old
market town dates back to the 3rd Century and Peredurus the Celtic King, it's
castle now in ruins near the 12th Century church which has old wall paintings of
historic and biblical scenes. A detour at this point south to Malton and Eden
Camp is of interest to all ages, a World War II prison camp converted to a
museum depicting life in the 1940's.
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Pickering is also
the southern end if the North Yorks Steam Railway
which runs through the Moors north to Goathland and Gromont, functioning as a
commuting service with a daily timetable and many stops en-route, it is a must
for tourists and walkers with a days pass.
Located between the
Staindale and Dalby Forests through which the Forest Drive is open to the public
with many picnic points. The Bride Stones are a short walk from High
Staindale, they are stones are limestone which has weathered over the years, the
lower layers mores o then the upper ones producing some interesting formations.
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Heading out of
Pickering for Thornton Dale a small village with an 17th Century Inn and an Old
Smithy then turning
north to Low and High Dalby both of which have parking and WC's for the
traveller.

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The Forest Drive continues
to Bickley where we turn east to Hackness in Trouts Dale, the neighby
Hackness Hall is open to view before completing the journey with an ice
cream on the beach in Scarborough or in it's old town harbour area.
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Scarborough Old Town Harbour & South Beach

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A prisoner of War Camp from WWII which has been has been
restored as an Exhibition Centre give the visitor an in-depth experience of life
in the 1940s in War Time England. This is an extensive exhibit and worthy
of an extended visit if possible, each of the wooden huts of the camp offer a
different theme.
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