Armed with directions from the B-&-B owner, and confident I could find the thing, I set off. Twenty minutes of driving in what were probably circles, U-turns and figure eights never brought me to the mill. Nor produced any signs proclaiming the thing’s existence. I was more than disappointed; my frustration verged on panic. That wonderful scene was evaporating into the hedgerows and stone walls that kept me from my goal. But when my anxiety finally lessened, I realized I had another option.
In my circular wandering
I had discovered the village of Crich and the old Wakebridge Engine
House. Wakebridge is a remnant of the by-gone lead mining days in
Derbyshire, and joins the list of other mines with colorful names:
Bacchus Pipe, Leather Ears, Merry Bird, Pigtrough, Silver Eye, Wanton
Legs… The region wallows in mining history stretching from Roman times
into the 1950s. With such a past, surely I’d get something useful out of
Wakebridge. So, assuming a bird in the hand is worth more than trying
to locate its nest, I latched onto the mining house. Which is why
you’ll read about Wakebridge instead of the Heage windmill in “No Known
Address.” I still love the idea of a scene in the mill, though. The creaking of its six sails, the moaning wind whipping up the hill, the birds huddled in the loft, the scuff of thick-soled shoes on the wooden steps… Perhaps next trip I’ll find where it’s hiding. A potential scene in a mill is too good to become chaff in the wind.
Jo A. Hiestand, www.johiestand.com
No comments:
Post a Comment