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Homestead, Chapel-En-Le-Frith

Homestead, Chapel-En-Le-Frith

Homestead, Homestead, Chapel Milton, Chapel-en-le-Frith, High Peak, Derbyshire, SK23 0QQ, United Kingdom

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Property details

Four bedrooms. 1 x double with en-suite freestanding bath, walk-in shower, basin, heated towel rail, and WC, 1 x double with en-suite walk-in shower, basin, heated towel rail, and WC, 2 x double. Bathroom with corner bath, shower over, basin, heated towel rail, and WC. Ground-floor shower room with walk-in shower, basin, heated towel rail, and WC. Kitchen/diner Utility. Sitting room with woodburning stove. Snug with woodburning stove. Games room

Key features & notes

Bath
Bed linen
Broadband/wifi
Dishwasher
EV charging
Fridge/freezer
Games room
Garden/patio
Heating
Hob
Microwave
Off road parking
Oven
Pub
Roadside parking
Shop
Shower
Towels
Tumble dryer
TV
Washing machine
Wine cooler
Woodburning stove

About where you'll be staying

Chapel-en-le-Frith is known as the Capital of the Peaks, it has an historic core including a cobbled market place and historic old stocks. There are a range of independent shops and services, including supermarkets and award-winning cafes and restaurants. Chapel is home to one of the Peak District’s principal traditional carnivals held in June and also a well dressing festival. May Day celebrations also take place in the market place. There is an Old Town Trail which is a free self-guided walking tour of Chapel’s historic centre, featuring the 13th Century Church of St. Thomas Becket, 18th Century Church Brow and the traditional Market Place with stocks and ancient cross. Just four miles away lies the spa town of Buxton, famous not only for its therapeutic spring water, but also for its Pavilion Gardens and splendid Victorian Opera House, and which boasts a variety of shows, attracting people from all over the world. A short drive away are an abundance of attractions including the Blue John Cavern, Kinder Scout and the castle at Castleton. There are many stately homes such as Chatsworth House and Lyme Hall all within easy reach. Kinder Plateau, Pennine Way and Snake Path are easily accessible by a short drive as is the beautiful Sett Valley Trail towards New Mills. Edale – an alternative start of the Pennine Way – is only a few miles away.
See More Holiday Cottages In Derbyshire

Bird watching in Derbyshire

Located in the heart of England, Derbyshire has a broad range of habitats from the upland moors of the Peak District to the flood plains of the Trent Valley. The high peat bogs, heather moorlands, dales and river valleys, woodlands and ancient forests, and large areas of pasture make up the landscape which attracts a wide variety of bird species throughout the county.

Carsington Water, owned and managed by Severn Trent Water, is a large reservoir in Ashbourne, surrounded by meadows, ancient hedgerows, woodland, reedbeds, and ponds. A visit during spring will reward you with the chance to see the courtship displays of great-crested grebes, and a variety of duckling species, as well as kingfishers catching fish for their young, while in summer the meadows come alive with wildflowers, and buzzards can be spotted soaring over the reservoir. In autumn and winter, look out for lapwings and little grebes, and scarce birds such as the great northern diver, which is usually found near the coast.

There is a visitor centre, cafes and restaurants, an RSPB shop, and a children’s adventure playground, and plenty of opportunities for outdoor activities including sailing, windsurfing, cycling, horse riding, and fishing.

Lying next to the River Derwent, Wyver Lane in Belper is one of Derbyshire Wildlife Trust’s most important wetland reserves comprising two pools surrounded by water meadows and reedbeds. There are many resident birds such Canada geese, tufted ducks, and little grebes, which are joined by curlews and common sandpipers that pass through in spring, and large numbers of gulls and ducks, including wigeon, that arrive in the winter.

There is no public access to Wyver Lane reserve but there is a bird hide and lane that runs alongside from where you can watch the wildlife and the surrounding hills are a beautiful setting for a walk.

Also part of the Derbyshire Wildlife Trust is Derwent Meadows, an important site for wildlife located next to a business park in Alvaston. The reserve consists of wet and dry grasslands, reedbeds, hedgerows, ponds, and woodland in which the rare Cetti’s warbler can sometimes be heard singing. Grey herons, little grebes, and kingfishers can all be spotted on the River Derwent which runs through the site.

For wildfowl, head to Carr Vale where the open water, marshland, and grassland are home to large flocks of wigeons, teals, gadwalls, and pochards in the winter. The reserve also attracts wintering finches and buntings, and in autumn, huge roosts of swallows gather before making their journey back to Africa. Breeding birds include reed and sedge warblers, whitethroats, yellowhammers, moorhens, and the declining skylark, and birds of prey such as hobbies can be seen all year round.

Located next to Pride Park football stadium just 3km from Derby city centre is The Sanctuary bird reserve which doesn’t offer public access due to ground-nesting birds, but offers good viewing opportunities from the perimeter. The designated local nature reserve has an artificial sand martin nest bank, a lake that attracts lapwings and little ringed plovers, and grassland where skylarks, reed buntings, and stonechats can be spotted.

Elvaston Castle Country Park is 200 acres of woodland, parkland, and Grade II listed formal gardens, as well as a designated local nature reserve. The reserve has wildflower meadows, reedbeds, wet woodlands, and lakes and islands which are overlooked by bird hides. Look out for grey herons, kingfishers, tufted ducks, and reed buntings around the water, birds of prey such as sparrowhawks and buzzards hunting overhead, and nuthatches and finches which are attracted to the bird feeders.

There are also plenty of family-friendly activities with the gothic Elvaston Castle at the heart of the estate, as well as a sculpture trail, children’s play area, cafes, and numerous events and festivals that take place throughout the year.

Nature on your doorstep

Cramside Wood
8.8 miles
Carsington Water
22.0 miles

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