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Climb the Moor to Hob Cross Commondale Quakers' Causeway Hob Cross Hob on the Hill Whiteley Beck Commondale Transport by rail brings you from the Middlesbrough Whitby line to Commondale, from where a footpath links the single platform with the village. There is a local bus service, the Moorsbus, which operates from the beginning of April to the end of September. Parking is available around Commondale village. It might help to stop at the cleveland Inn and buy a few drinks, ask the staff for permission to park for the duration of your walk. They will keep a weather eye on your car(s). You should not be away for more than a couple of hours anyway, unless you are planning a picnic en route. Getting there by car is similar to Kildale, and there is a road that crosses the Moors from the A171 Guisborough Whitby road. The last stretch of the road that comes away from the A171 is steep and 'bendy', however, and caution is called for when approaching the village from the north. Starting from Commondale village, pass one of the finely constructed red brick houses using the locally manufactured bricks along the Kildale road. Turn right off this road and head towards the first stone 'trod' or causeway, and cross Whiteley Beck. This trod leads past a pair of war memorials to two loal men, Grenadier Guardsmen Robbie Leggott (killed in action in 1916) and Alf Cockerill (who died of his wounds sustained in fighting in 1914). These fellows were known to have been found of walking around their home turf before enlisting. Finding the track onward to 'Hob on the Hill' is not easy, but even if you pass too far along the track you find a pre historic stone boundary alignment. This takes you up some way to the left of the 'Hob'. Look out for this marker (a bit like a standing stone sausage). Ref. 646 124) and stands amid an excavated tumulus or Bronze Age burial mound. 'Hobson'), A 'Hob' derives from folklore witchcraft and has been described as a hairy, ugly dwarf that dwelt in moorland steadings. On the other side of the stone see the inscription 'RC 1798', referring to local landowner Robert Chaloner Esquire, (whose family later owned mines near Guisborough). Around it are the aligned stones dating back several thousand years. You might like to leave the path to the south west to investigate 'Hob on the Hill' and view the unique stone and earth bank boundary. The stones one of which has been carved with a cross to denote a 'change of spiritual ownership' of the 'boundary wall' are set in a low embankment. Look around towards Castleton village in the south east and Danby Dale beyond. Westerdale is to the right of Castleton. Looking northward you can see the North Sea beyond Guisborough (out of sight at this point below you). Westward are the Cleveland Hills ('Kliffe land' or 'Cliff land' to the Danes who settled the lower lying land in the Guisborough plain). Head roughly north eastward towards the sea and locate a track that leads to a line of boundary stones and takes you almost due north to 'Hob Cross'. at the bottom end of the boundary stones is 'Hob Cross' itself, just before the corner of a walled field. Along the way is a boundary stone marked 'SK AWD 1844' and below that 'TC 1856'. Ref 646 134). This is the half way point. Nearby is a private memorial to 'Lilian Foulkes RIP 3/7/1914 to 24/6/2007'. A paved stone trod, the Quakers' Causeway cuts across the moor towards Guisborough. Packhorse trains bore goods along pannier ways such as this ('panniers' were baskets strapped either side of the horses to carry the goods to market) impressive stone flagged track. You will soon look downward at Lockwood Beck Reservoir with the coast beyond. Ref 671 117). Follow the clearly marked track downward from the Castleton road and Commondale comes into view. On the final leg of your walk into the village the plain red brick built St Peter's church stands on the right. Lastly enter the village past the Old Post Office Tearoom and on (back) to the Cleveland Inn. Over the moors and far away. If you enjoyed this one, try some of the other walks long and short in the TRAVEL NORTH series. Walks and cycle rides extend from East Yorkshire (Hornsea and Flamborough Head) to North Yorkshire (Saltburn cliffops, Port Mulgrave to Hinderwell on the coast, Eston Moors, Roseberry Topping, Nidderdale, Upper Wharfedale inland; Chester le Street to Consett in County Durham, Kielder Water, Hadrian's Wall and Bamburgh in Northumberland. There are also several drives in North Yorkshire that cross into County Durham and back into the top corner of Yorkshire on the way to Tan Hill, around Swaledale and Wensleydale via Richmond. If you're left hungering for more, there are more Amazon links on these pages for books to show the way, at least on paper, help you find your way around. There are travel links on each page, with web addresses and phone numbers.