What are the best bits?
Wainstalls: The Wainstall Waifs were 250 girls who moved to the village from the workhouses of Liverpool in the late 19th century to work in Calvert's mills. They benefited from the fresh moorland air and learnt a trade of worsted spinners. Some of the girls were buried in the Luddenden Dean church yard nearby. The main employer in the village today is Heights which manufactures graphic arts equipment here. Paralympic gold medallist Hannah Cockcroft was a pupil at Wainstalls primary school.
Castle Carr gateway: A gateway of two castellated towers connected by an arch leads to the Castle Carr estate (private). The castle was a mock Tudor/Norman structure built in the 1860s with a water garden featuring a 130ft tall fountain, the second highest in England. The site was too isolated, the building was damp and disputes with locals over rights of way meant it was never fully inhabited. The castle was largely demolished in the 1960s.
Luddenden Dean: In the wood look out for long-tailed tits high in the trees, woodpeckers, treecreepers and nuthatches as well as overwintering redwings and fieldfares. Celandines and wood anemones brighten the woodland floor in spring followed by bluebells.