Handily, for the Whitfield trig point bag, there was a big pull-in / lay by not far from where I needed to be. I parked up and looked to see if there was a gap in the hedge… Which there wasn’t.
So, I followed the track around as I could see from the verge where I needed to be to bag this one!
I headed up the track to Upper Trebandy around a large field initially.
At the top of the field, the tracks bends right.
There was all sorts of scrap metal, farming paraphernalia and what looked like abandoned, broken vehicles. There was a building that had started to be built but left.
At the top of this track is a gate.
Head through this gate but stick to the hedge and follow it to the top of the field.
It’s a little hidden in the hedge, but you can just about see the Whitfield trig point in the hedge at the top of the field to the left slightly.
Not bad views, a nice little walk but nothing special about this one. However, it was another one in the bag nonetheless!
This one was a little further down the road from a previous trig bag – the Campfield New trig point. If you’re looking for two quick and easy bags, these two are worth a look. I was pushed for time so bagged them both to keep the bagging ticking over! I knew there wasn’t much to them and with their proximity to one another it seemed logical to bag them both.
As I write this blog – that’s 16 / 70 trig points bagged!
However, future blogs will hopefully be a little more interesting than this one – but I got the job done!
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