Tuesday 7 January 2020
Linton Falls
Just upstream from where it curls around Linton churchyard, the River Wharfe thunders over Linton falls. I've posted photos from here before. It is a popular spot, a short and pleasant walk from Grassington village centre. In winter it can be a fairly bleak, dark, colourless scene but the roar of the water adds drama, so that it is worth visiting in any season.
There are two weirs. You can just see the upper weir in the background of the photo above. The weirs built up a head of water to power Linton Mill, originally a medieval corn mill and, from 1788, a worsted and cotton mill, which was sited alongside the lower weir. The mill went out of business in the 1950s and was demolished in the 1980s, after which housing was built on the site (see third photo).
The upper weir is harnessed for hydro-electricity. The original hydro plant opened in 1909 to power the nearby village of Grassington. In 1948, when the National Grid took over, it became redundant and closed. The plant was reopened in 2012, using the original building and fitted with two screw turbines.
Below the weirs, the river is constricted by limestone outcrops and, particularly after rain, it sweeps down in a dramatic cascade. The bridge across the river is known as the Tin Bridge and was originally constructed so that mill workers could get to work from the village. The current wooden footbridge was built in 1989.
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As a child I went to Grassington fair with my parents. We bought a balloon and sent it up with our blessings in a distance competition. Mine flew over the North Sea and landed in Denmark. I had won!
ReplyDeleteThose homes are so close to the water!
ReplyDeleteI wouldn't want to live right on that river...too much damp I'm thinking. But still, beautiful to look at and photograph. Thanks for all the information about the weirs.
ReplyDeleteMy grandmother told me moist air is good for the complexion. In her 80s, she had fewer wrinkles than me in my thirties. She grew up near the Atlantic ocean, but not as close as those houses are. Moving water is soothing, when it is where it is suppose to be.
ReplyDeleteTimeless. Wonderful shots.
ReplyDeleteThose houses are fortunate to have a river behind them, wonder what it's like living next to water?
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