Where growing, making & good living come together

Yorkshire Day – five reasons why I love living in West Yorkshire

Posted by on Monday 1 August 2011 in meta | 4 comments

Today is Yorkshire Day, the totally made-up day of celebration in my adopted shire. Like most people, we don’t celebrate it in the slightest but I thought it was a fitting day to post some Yorkshire-centric thoughts I’ve been musing for the last few weeks.

I moved to West Yorkshire in 2000 – my then-boyfriend had a place on a teacher-training course in Leeds and since I had nothing keeping me in Liverpool (or driving me anywhere else), we moved to Leeds about a nanosecond after handing in our last essays at uni. We rented a house in Armley — the house that I went onto buy and finally sold last Friday — but I wasn’t particularly expecting to stay there or around here in general. Now though, I reckon I’ll probably stay – we might cross the border into North Yorkshire but unless we emigrate, I can’t see us leaving the land of the white rose. (I’m deeply sorry my 300+ years of Lancasterian ancestors but that’s the way it is ;) )

1. There’s lots of green space

For a metropolitan county with a population of over 2 million, West Yorkshire is bloomin’ green. And I’m not just talking about the rolling hills of farmland and moorland in the more rural bits: there are parks galore (including Roundhay Park, one of the biggest city parks in Europe) and acres of woodland mingled throughout the cities. We’ve always got fun places to walk the dog, forage or just enjoy the hills & dales.

(The photo below is John in Roundhay Park. For some reason, it is the only photo I have of Roundhay Park and doesn’t really show anything of the park but I think it’s funny so thought I’d use it anyway ;) )

2. Everywhere is close enough together than it can be treated like one big city

I know some people in Bradford, Huddersfield and Wakefield consider it an expedition to go to Leeds, and people in Leeds NEVER visit Bradford, Wakey or Hudd but to me, it’s just all one big blur of a conurbation. Bradford city centre is better for some things than Leeds; Otley, Hebden Bridge or Halifax better for other things than the cities. It’s easy to mix and match.

3. It’s well connected

One of the reasons I can treat it as one big city is because it’s so well connected. The public transport is much better than most people credit – sure, the trains and buses are as busy and expensive as anywhere, but the chaos in Leeds after the train station’s electrical failure last week shows how well it usually works! From the two main roads near our old house, we could get direct buses to just about every town & city in the west of the county, and we nearly always fly from Leeds-Bradford airport – so great to be just 10 minutes in a taxi from home at the end of a holiday.

Away from public transport, there are plenty of easily accessible motorways nearby to get us across or up and down the country – or if we aren’t in a hurry, A-roads for prettier, winding drives through the countryside.

4. There are loads of lovely buildings & places to visit

We used to live about a mile and a half away from Kirkstall Abbey – the ruins of a 12th century abbey, in the middle of Leeds (picture above is our shadows in the old nave); now we live a few miles from Saltaire, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Harewood House and Temple Newsam are just on the other side of Leeds, and further south in the county, Yorkshire Sculpture Park is a lovely place to visit on a sunny day (the picture at the very top is YSP on a lovely sunny day!).

On a less grand/showy scale, all around there are lots of pretty Yorkshire stone cottages and Victorian homes from the days of the textile boom. A lot of people complain about the lack of good architecture around here, and all I can say to those people is look up. For example, we were sat in the Wastefield urban “garden” in Bradford city centre last weekend and (admittedly because that whole city-killing misadventure knocked down some awful 1960s concrete monstrosities) we were awed by the buildings of Little Germany and thereabouts.

5. It’s deliciously diverse

Some people make a big deal about the ethnic make-up of the area, and while I do very much like the various different cultural influences on the area, that’s only half the delight of the area’s diversity.

The city centres and small market towns. The brand-spanking-new towerblocks and the lovely old cottages & mills. The remaining heavy industry and the moorlands. The ever-fluctuating super cool areas and the ones that haven’t changed for years. The progressive hippy enclaves and the old school uber-conservative villages.

I’m not saying West Yorkshire is unique in any of these ways or that it’s objectively the best place in the world ™ – just why I like it around here. And I had to limit this list to just West Yorkshire, and not South, East and especially not North Yorkshire because if I included all the things I like about those places too, I’d never finish. Basically, the long and the short of it, I heart Yorkshire ;)

Fellow Yorkshire dwellers, what are your favourite bits?

4 Comments

Join the conversation and post a comment.

  1. Lynsey aka Swirlyarts

    It’s got to be the accent – love me a good Yorkshire accent :) Sadly mine is diminishing after living down south for a bit and then moving to *whispers* Lancashire. My dad still hasn’t forgiven me for moving to the wrong side of the Pennines!

  2. Alison

    I really enjoyed living in ‘Yorkshire’ and had I not met the OH would probably still be there. I still visit friends in Bingley and Leeds so ‘get my fix’ every now and then. Saltaire is a lovely place, you are very lucky to live close by.

  3. strowger

    Lancashite – it’s named for a reason.

  4. Denise

    Coming over to North Yorkshire? Go on go on go on go on! Why do I love yorkshire? The moors, the sea, the air, the people, the animals I see every day on my walks up the lane – to name just a few. Love it!

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *