The Teifi Pools

The Teifi Pools

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North York Moors National Park

North York Moors National Park

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Tucked away in the rolling moorland of Northdale, near Rosedale Abbey in the North York Moors, lies a remarkable project that blends sculpture, walking, restoration, and deep connection to place. Hanging Stones is the latest large-scale work by British artist Andy Goldsworthy, commissioned by the Ross Foundation, and is not just a single artwork—it is a journey. hangingstones.org+2Financial Times+2


Origins and Vision

Goldsworthy, known for his site-specific art often made of natural materials—stones, wood, leaves, ice—has long worked with the landscape as both canvas and collaborator. Hanging Stones is one of his most ambitious undertakings: the project re-imagines and restores existing buildings in varying states of disrepair, connecting them via a six-mile walk through the moor valley. hangingstones.org+1

Commissioned by the Ross Foundation, the project aims not only to create striking art but also to revive architectural heritage: nine buildings (plus one new one) have been restored as artworks. Goldsworthy conceived of the whole as a single artwork in which the walk itself—and how one moves from structure to structure—is as integral as what is inside each building. hangingstones.org+1


What Walkers Will Experience

  • The route & buildings: The walk covers ~6 miles (Northdale area), linking together nine restored buildings: Southfield House, Hanging Stone House, Sugget Spring, Job’s Well, Hither House, Bogs House, Ebenezer, Northdale Head House (also known as Dowson’s House) and Red House. A tenth, Heygate Thorns, is under construction (completion expected 2025). hangingstones.org+1

  • Time & difficulty: It takes about 5-6 hours, depending on pace and time spent at the buildings. It’s best suited to proficient walkers; terrain can be challenging, especially in wet weather, with some parts muddier or slippery. hangingstones.org

  • Access & logistics: Visitors must book in advance. To enter the buildings you’re given a key (from the Ross Foundation) and a map. You take responsibility for opening/closing the buildings. Walkers cannot stay overnight, and buildings are only accessible during daylight hours. Some parts of the walk are over public rights of way; others are “permissive paths” granted by the Rosedale Estate. hangingstones.org


Artistic Highlights

Goldsworthy’s interventions are subtle but powerful. Each building has a different interplay of material, light, space and textures. For example:

  • In some of the restored buildings you’ll find natural materials (wood, stone, etc.) used in ways that amplify the sense of the building being shaped by both human hands and landscape.

  • One evocative feature noted in press coverage: an 11-tonne sandstone block suspended inside Hanging Stone House, so visitors can crawl underneath and contemplate how it is held there in balance. Financial Times

  • Spaces are often quiet, dim, and contemplative, drawing attention to elements like fire, shadows, air, weather, decay and renewal. It’s not gallery art; it’s art in the moor, and the moor shapes it.


What Makes It Special

Here are some features that make Hanging Stones unique:

  1. Integration of Nature & Architecture
    These houses were originally vernacular buildings, often in decay. By restoring them and transforming them into works of art, Goldsworthy preserves heritage while also reinterpreting the past. The walk and landscape are not just settings but collaborators.

  2. The Walk as Art
    The path between the buildings is itself part of the art. Each stage builds anticipation — crossing terrain, glimpsing the next building, experiencing changes in view, light, weather.

  3. Restricted Access & Slow Experience
    Limiting numbers of visitors, having keys, no overnight stays, and requiring daylight means people tend to move slower, pay more attention. By imposing friction, the project resists becoming a mass-tourism site.

  4. Sustainability & Stewardship
    There’s thought being given to how to maintain the buildings, manage footfall, protect the moor, and how visitors can honour the site. There are no facilities along the route; walkers are asked to tread lightly. hangingstones.org


Practical Tips for Visitors

If you plan to visit, here are things to know:

  • Book ahead. As noted, numbers are limited. Make sure you secure a time slot and the key.

  • Wear proper walking boots / footwear suited for mud and uneven ground. Check weather forecasts.

  • Bring map, water, snacks. Since there are no facilities on the walk, you’ll need to be self-sufficient.

  • Start early in the day to make sure you have daylight for all buildings and return walk.

  • Respect the art, buildings, and environment: keep dogs on leads, close gates, leave no trace.


Reflections: Why Hanging Stones Resonates

Hanging Stones speaks to many of the values people are hungry for today:

  • A yearning for slowness and deep engagement with place.

  • The desire to bridge past and present: reviving old buildings, recognizing landscape history, yet creating something new.

  • The interrelationship of art and nature, how each shapes the other.

  • A sense of pilgrimage or exploration rather than passive consumption—walking, discovering, reflecting.

It also raises questions: what does it mean to restore, to preserve, to intervene in nature? How do you balance public access with conservation? What is the role of private patronage in creating cultural landmarks?


Conclusion

Hanging Stones is more than an art installation; it is a journey. It invites you to walk, to reflect, to feel the texture of moorland and stone, and to slow down in a landscape full of weather, time, and memory. If you get the chance to walk it, it’s the kind of place that lingers in your mind long after you return home.

What Nature Can Show Us When We Slow Down

What Nature Can Show Us When We Slow Down

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The Trail as a Teacher: What Nature Can Show Us When We Slow Down

Not all wisdom is found in books. Some of it lives in the curve of a trail, in the silence beneath trees, and in the steady rhythm of your own footsteps. When we hike with intention—moving slowly, observing deeply—nature begins to reveal itself not just as a place, but as a teacher.

In a world built on speed, slowing down on the trail can feel like a radical act. But it’s there, in the quiet, that the most meaningful lessons rise to the surface. Here’s what hiking mindfully can teach us—if we’re willing to listen.

Patience: Letting the Trail Set the Pace

Nature doesn’t rush. Trees grow in seasons. Rivers carve their paths over centuries. When we step onto a trail with a need to “get it done,” we miss the invitation to let go of urgency.

Hiking slowly, without a goal of mileage or pace, teaches us to adjust to the natural rhythm of things. It’s okay to stop and watch ants. It’s okay to take ten minutes on one view. The trail isn’t a race—it’s a reminder that things unfold in their own time.

 

🌿 “A tree doesn’t rush to grow, yet still reaches the sky.”

 

Impermanence: Everything Changes, and That’s Okay

Look around while walking. The clouds above you shift constantly. Leaves fall. Trails get muddy. Footprints disappear. Nothing in nature stays the same for long.

This gentle awareness of impermanence—when embraced—helps us accept change in our own lives. Just as storms pass over mountains, difficult seasons pass through us, too.

 

Mindful hiking helps you witness the beauty in each fleeting moment without needing to hold on.

 

Presence: Listening Deeply, Moving Lightly

The trail speaks. Not in words, but in sound, scent, and texture—the crunch of earth beneath your boots, the chirp of a distant bird, the cool air brushing against your face.

Presence happens when we tune into our senses. We stop narrating and start experiencing. Every rock and rustle becomes an anchor to the now. Hiking this way turns an ordinary walk into a living meditation.

 

Take off your headphones. Let nature be your playlist.

 

Clarity: What Emerges in the Quiet

In stillness, clarity surfaces. When we walk without distraction, thoughts slow down. Space opens. Ideas, emotions, and insights that were previously tangled begin to unwind.

Many hikers find that trails help them process hard decisions, reconnect to purpose, or simply feel more like themselves. Nature doesn’t fix us—it reminds us we were never broken.

 

Humility: You’re a Small Part of Something Vast

There’s something powerful about standing beneath a towering pine, or watching stars rise above a silent valley. Nature has a way of humbling us—not in a diminishing way, but in an expansive one.

Mindful hiking places us back in context. We’re not the center of the universe—we’re threads in something much greater. And that truth is both grounding and liberating.

 

How to Hike More Mindfully

You don’t need to be a monk or expert to hike with presence. Try this on your next outing:

 

  • 🌿 Walk slower than usual

  • 🌿 Leave your phone on airplane mode

  • 🌿 Pause every so often to just listen

  • 🌿 Engage your senses—what can you hear, smell, or feel?

  • 🌿 Set a small intention before you begin

  • 🌿 Close your hike with a moment of gratitude

A Trail to Yourself

Mindful hiking isn’t about performance or achievement. It’s about coming home to yourself through the mirror of nature. The trail doesn’t need you to be anyone other than who you are. It just asks you to show up, to walk slowly, and to pay attention.

Next time you’re on a trail, don’t just walk it—let it walk you back to yourself.

 

Ready to Begin?

Explore our free guide “A Simple Start for the Trail Curious” for beginner-friendly hikes, mindfulness practices, and tips for reconnecting with nature—wherever you are on your journey.