On this cycle ride video I cycle from Denby Dale (of Denby Dale Pie fame) to Cawthorne (backing onto Cannon Hall & Cannon Hall Farm) South Yorkshire then in a loop up onto the South Yorkshire Pennines then along country lanes back to Denby Dale. APOLOGIES FOR THE BAD SOUND QUALITY – DUE TO A NEW GO-PRO CAMERA HOUSING WHICH BROKE ANYWAY!! Next time, the sound quality will be better, with external mic.

    A MUST-DO bike ride if you’re looking for South & West Yorkshire cycle routes or cycling in Yorkshire – in the Kirklees area, near Huddersfield.

    Cycling over 60 / cycling 60+ : Setting myself a challenge this year to do 66 bike rides with bike ride videos in the year I officially become an Old Age Pensioner.

    Maps: I have an Ordnance Survey Media Licence: ©Crown copyright 2024 Ordnance Survey. Media 057/24

    [Music] Y show South yire and hello everyone today I’m in deby Dale which is in kirle near Huddersfield and of course Denby Dale is famous for its pie world famous pies we’re talking an enormous pie massive pie ginormous pie which um the people of zi Dale have baked to celebrate various occasions and before we do anything else I’ll just take you along somewhere to have a look at something it’s a lovely day but this looks like a bit of a hilly region so I think it’s going to be a bit of a challenge just doing a quick diversion to take you to this amazing named place which is called wait for it wait for it you cannot come to Deale without going to the pie Hall the pie Hall this is pie Hall I mean in in a Village famous for its amazing pies you’ve got to have a community center called pie Hall I just love that name pie Hall this little lane called anyway let’s go and do the actual ride and I’ll update you on interesting facts about the enormous dumale pies and also of course I’ll describe the route that I’m taking today for those of you that don’t know D now this road is called cook sto cook stool Road and back in the day the demale pie was baked at Cook stool Farmhouse um which must have been somewhere down here I don’t suppose it exists still um I mean it wasn’t baked in The Farmhouse cuz it was too big for that I imagine it was baked in out buildings but anyway let’s carry on um d d as it suggests is in a dip and so that means that you have to climb up to get out of it so I imagine there’s a bit of a climb coming up don’t you just tell people who say that right oops I’m not properly warmed up so unfortunately I’m going to have to walk this um little steep bit here but um as soon as I get going I’ll tell you all about the Pie Oh and about the roots back down oh no so I’m not properly warmed up it’s a fantastic day here in zenid Dale absolutely beautiful sunshine a lovely Friday in June and the rout I’m going to take goes obviously from Dei Dale and then it goes around in a clockwise Direction and I’m hoping to take in part of Canon Hall grounds um Canon Hall is famous of course for Canon Hall Farm which um appears on telly quite a lot like summer on the farm winter on the farm whatever and also on the Yorkshire vet the second part of the ride um covers the same ground as the first time of the ride that I did to penone a few weeks ago but then once we get up onto the hills we take a right and we head in a different direction I do like pies but the past giv me now the Dale Pie as I said is world famous and it’s baked to celebrate certain occasions the the first pie was was baked back in King George III’s Reign to celebrate his recovery and inverted commas from Madness um unfortunately it was a short-lived recovery because um as many people will know he George II just descended into madness and that’s why his son became Prince Regent in his place um but anyway the first idale pie was baked on that occasion but the infamous pie the pie that I talk about well I don’t talk about the P I mention in the thumbnail on this video was in 1846 and it was baked to celebrate the repeal of the Corn Laws I mean the Corn Laws were that’s really really bad for the general public especially the poor because at the end of the Napoleonic Wars uh markets were opened up and cheap corn could now be imported from overseas from France Etc and of course um cheap imported corn was undermining our own farmers and so what the government did they passed the Corn Laws um I mean correct me if I’m wrong here do correct me if I’m wrong this is just my understanding and I think I was asleep during the history lesson at school when we learned about the co laws but anyway uh the government the Tory government decided to ban Imports of um overseas corn into the UK which meant that um Farmers kind of kept engl British Farmers kept their price artificially High which meant that it was very expensive to buying ingredients and especially it especially affected the poor of course um so when the Corn Laws were repealed in 1846 there was great celebration because it meant that finally um corn and I don’t know if it covered wheat as well but anyway um it was more accessible and cheaper and people could get a hold of it and so the demid Dale pie was created to celebrate the occasion and an enormous pie was baked and a big platform was set up to um celebrate the cutting of the great pie and all the local dignitaries were on this platform along with the enormous pie and um someone I think his name was Mr Pierce um somebody the pi um he it was his job to cut the pie a bit like cutting a wedding cake and apparently Story Goes he was just about to cut the pie when disaster the platform collapsed and the pie and all the dignitaries just went everywhere just everything collapsed everything turned into chaos and this guy who was cutting the pie unfortunately was propelled right into the middle of the p pie so I don’t know if he went head first or or what and I don’t know whether the pie was really hot I doubt it actually I doubt whether it was boiling hot cuz it they probably waited quite a while while everything was set up between um finishing baking the pie and cutting it but anyway this poor bloke ended up being propelled right into the middle of the pie and of course it’s become a local Legend and the 1846 pie um it’s a bit Infamous because of this then there was the pie that wasn’t which would have been baked to celebrate the coronation of queen Queen Elizabeth II in 1953 but because russing was still in place in the UK they couldn’t get hold of the ingredients especially the meat and words got out in fact words crossed the whole world to Australia where Australian beef Farmers offered to supply the beef for the pie so the pie could be baked to celebrate the coronation um what they did they offered to they said to the Al I don’t know if they said but the idea was that um the ministry of food or whatever it was or meat and I don’t um in the UK would release sufficient meat for the demell pie to be baked and um then the Australian Farmers would send over the equivalent um so that could be put in storage along you know for rationing the the only problem is that this happened about 3 days before the coronation by which time it was far too late to bake the pie I mean it’s a massive feat baking the dumi Dell pie something you can’t just do overnight and so sadly that pie never happened um I think there’s been a couple more pies two or three more pies since then but obviously they’re not every year because this is a big undertaking they they just tend to um bake the pies for specific celebrations visiting this really is an absolutely beautiful part of the world it is on the border of West Yorkshire and South Yorkshire and um the first half of the Walk is kind of country lanes like this beautiful Greenery Etc and the seconds will be climbing up onto the hills onto the Moors and you can see the penines in the distance tooms from his Madness before presumably he descended into madness again I don’t know why they chose the pie to celebrat if you know let me know in the comments below but the pie has been baked on handful of occasions to celebrate certain occasions hello now the infamous one was one another climb now correct me if I’m wrong we did the Corn Laws in history at school but I think I was asleep in the lesson but my understanding I think is that in the first half of the 19th century the corn wars were introduced by so government because after the Napoleonic Wars there was a danger of cheap corn flooding into the UK which would undermine British farmers and make life difficult for them so the Tori government introduced a ban on all imported corn but of course the consequences were that farmers were able to price corn at artificially artificially high prices which Put It Out Of Reach of poor people and the general public it was very unpopular and I think it was 1846 the cornors were repealed oh look at View and the people of zi Dale decided to bake a pie to celebrate an enormous pie you can look online to see the amazing list of ingredients that went into it I mean we’re talking a huge pie monster I don’t quite know the dimensions I’ll try and find out but anyway the launch of the pie high day came for the cutting of the pie the official cutting of the pie by local dignitaries and a platform was built at deby Dale and all the dignitaries stood on the platform along with the pie ready to cut it and I think it was a guy a man called Joseph Pierce who was the guy who was going to cut the pie perform the pie cutting ceremony and I just St it it was just about to cut the pie when the platform collapsed along with all the signes on it and the pie there are some really nice walks around here really pretty um I did a walk last year from Cannon Hall to up through all the woodlands and fields which are on the right in this video and it was really really nice um we did it for from corthorn Village not from Canon Hall car park cuz you have to pay to um parking Canon Hall car park but you can usually find some Road parking in corthorn and then there’s um there are various ways into the grounds of Cannon Hall from corthorn and both the grounds and Cannon Hall itself are free to enter their owns by barnesley Council quite pretty if in that neck of the woods obviously you have to pay to go to Canon Hall Farm I think there were couple more pies and then came they wanted to create a pie to celebrate the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II but because of rationing after the war which was still on in was it 1953 um they couldn’t get the meat the ministry of food or whatever it was said no no sorry you can’t have the meat no it’s a just a you got to beond Russians like everyone else and words got round word got out and in Australia a group of beef Farmers offered to supply the meat the way they offered to do it was to to say to the British Ministry of whatever it was to um to I lost my train of thought though yeah for them to say yes you can have the meat and then for the meat to come over from Australia and replace that from local butchers Etc but sadly they only got to go ahead three days before the coronation which of course was too late so it never happens I think there’s been a couple of PES since then one in the 60s and I think one in the ’90s question mark I think on hot day like this you probably want to eat kiche rather than pies wouldn’t you kich is a sort of pie now this road surface has been as is this for the past two years the entire top surface has been torn off and all we’ve got stuff underne this spit it’s a terrible Road surface I it’s like the the top of the surface has been completely stripped back it’s really really really bad and I don’t know I don’t know why it’s like this and why they haven’t done something about it cuz it’s it’s got to be one of the worst Road surfaces I’ve ever cycled on bumpy bumpy horrible horrible oh no it is really lovely here my son and I did a a walk around here over in those woods over there we walked from uh Canon Hall where Walks from Cora and it through Canon Hall Estates which is very pretty and if you want to visit Canon Hall best to park in C where it’s free and walk down to the hall it’s free to get into the Hall it’s free to get into the grounds but if you put Park in the Canon Hall car park I think you have to pay and I don’t think can Hall F fre I think there climbing up so Junction turn right now we enter South yor is we are quite high up here and soon we turn but we kind of turn back on ourselves on a hair pin band on the turning right down to Cannon Hall car park there was a bridal way through Cannon Hall from the car park which I’m hoping will be suitable for bikes if not I’ll have to walk it when we get there I’ll tell you some interesting 20th century history about Cannon Hall oh great they resurf it now we were supposed to turn right here but the road’s closed and I don’t know if it’s possible to walk my bike down it but I tend to think it isn’t so might have to do a bit of a detour here here and that will mean that we don’t actually walk through Cannon Hall grounds we we cycle the long way around instead okay we can’t go that way so we’re not doing we’re not doing kindon Hall not today anyway we come do that another day yeah we’re going to have to do a detour because um the tarmac is boiling hot and there’s nowhere to walk your bike so so maybe we’ll do that in a future video and in the meantime we’ll we’ll take the detour which isn’t too bad it’s not too bad at all for this road comes out on the edge of a village called kbor and from there we can cycle along a beautiful Lane up to the Village of corthorn which is where we would have ended up had we been able to cycle down on the um closed Road see the M1 over there heading South toward shield and barnesley was over there can always tell barnesley bit like harate in that it has a massive tall multi story building in the middle of it can’t help but think they’re probably Council offices another nice whatever on our left somewhere is willly Edge services on the M1 and I can’t remember where this comes out I think it’s at a place called kexb at least we’re being treated to a downhill stretch just come off the that [Music] oh big windy I think this is K but we’re heading for corthorn which I’m not mistaken is a right ter here it is hello so we didn’t get to see Canon Hall today but we we were on another ride I’ll try and devise another ride I want to do a different ride every time these 66 rides in my 66th year which I really don’t think because of the weather and my mom and her problems it’s not going to happen but I’ll do as many as I can we need to get new hood here it keeps moving around to cover the left shifter oh we’re climbing up again soon to get to horor because we’ve come downhill quite a lot and that only means one thing you’re going to have to climb again look at this pretty little Bridge the fields of buttercups we as I said on my penone ride corthorn is one of the prettiest villages in South yorshire oh this is very pretty at corthorn We join the route that we did on the penone ride and we we go along that route as far as or just beyond in Birch was Reservoir up onto the Ms and then we leave that route when we turn right so we’ll be doing that nice little route through the woodlands and they’re not so nice climb up from it towards inber with but if you want to do flat cycling you come here like d more North de as you can see I’ve got my gar in again which tells me what my heart’s rate is doing currently 144 St coach doesn’t want me to go above 145 at the moment because I’m still using myself back and cycling on the road after this the bad [Applause] winter I think it may just go up above that around here there’s Co on see stretched now corthorn Village is known as one of the prettiest villages in South Yorkshire and it really really is it’s gorgeous and it’s where we began the peniston cycle ride that I did on another video um so this road this um particular route I’m doing today picks up that route for the first few miles and um it’s like the same the same route it’s a gorgeous route that takes us uh takes us up a few climbs and through some gorgeous Woodland beautiful Woodland and um then by the side of a reservoir and then up onto the Moors and there we turn right and we leave the route that I did to penis St so sweet about those places all the the flower H flower baskets are sponsored by well that one’s in memory of some one back there was by cor Thorn’s lovely and it has some um hanging baskets from the lamp posts uh which are sponsored by local families local businesses and um also in memory of loved ones and such a nice idea just makes the place look even prettier I do apologize for the sound quality on this video um not only can you not hear my voice mindly that might be a good thing um but you can’t hear any of the countryside sounds around and it’s because my um original GoPro camera housing the thing that holds it onto the harness um broke the original GoPro um part so I got a replacement a copy off Amazon and although it worked um I mean it looks the same as the other one for some I think there must be something different about it that means that recording using the GoPro microphone doesn’t actually work very well seeing the post office back there reminds me of the ride I did the day before yesterday around weatherbe area through the village of towith and the the bomber crash in 1945 found out a little bit more about it which I may be talk about later if you want to know more about it you can Google Sterling bomber crash talk with and the newspaper the York Press has some interesting info on it we’re coming up to where we started the penone ride cuz I was parked just up there you can park there on the road you can also Park here when it’s not too big all right that took longer than it should have done cuz I got I bought a new housing for my GoPro camera and the clip’s only gone and broken on the first day I’ve used it so there’s nothing holding the camera in apart from break Force so hopefully hopefully it be okay until I’ll get back and fix it if I can The Annoying Thing about the housing the waterproof housing for the GoPro camera and the replica I bought from Amazon same problem is that the little clip that requires a bit of force to clip it on and off and to open it and close it is plastic and pron are breaking I got a a really good metal P part on uh you on eBay which is what the design should have had in the first place and uh I worked a treat on my other camera housing so I can probably take that off cuz the other one just it was the got hinges at the other side that break on my other housing so that’s why I’d sends off for another one anyway yeah the metal one I’ll get get my husband to replace that he’s good with things like that we turn right here if you remember from the other ride and then second left there’s two lanes that Branch off here we don’t take this one we take the one after the little cottage yeah this takes us up to the Village of Highland Swain if that’s how it’s pronounced no one seems to know how it’s pronounced so can only assume that it’s pronounced like it’s spelled let me know in the comments below if I’m wrong we climb steadily now some of it not so steady was going to start talk about the air crash wasn’t I from the other video the would to be one the reason they think the plane crashed which it did it crashed just after the end of the second world war it was in October and the War I think ended in September it was late at night well it was about qu past was it qu past 1 in the morning something like that and bad’s visibility and the plane was refused landing at the master Mall Airfield so I think it had to circle around and it was in that circling round apparently that everything went wrong my husband who’s into planes explained why that is to last night but I can’t remember why but sadly it crashed right into the main street of towith and bounced couple of times and everybody was killed on board five crew members or was it six or seven I can’t remember most of them were in the early 20s which is terribly sad when the Village Post master was killed because the plane landed on the roof of the post office and he was asleep in the Attic normally apparently he’d been sleeping oh hold anyway back to the Village postmaster he was in the Attic because he was airing the bedroom downstairs for his son to sleep in when he got back from the wall how terribly sad that is a a all it’s the top of that climb I bit more of a climb coming up a look at this lovely old house super cool of this neck of the woods those Millions Windows gorgeous I’m going above the heart rate level that I’m supposed to be 152 elevation of 55 2 ft which isn’t as high as some of the elevations I’ve done on dark nor so all being well I’ll do an easier ride tomorrow and then a more demanding ride on Sunday all being well a h a still gradually climbing this area is a good training ground for if you’re going cycling Z and de as I hope to do at some point this year all being well well with the weather and well with my mom he still isn’t too well oh nice down here out we throwing light up here by the school if you remember from the other way at top of this climb okay [Applause] h that’s a 6:30 elevation heart rate 154 speed just into 5 miles an hour but then I don’t claim to do this for Speed not that kind of cyclist we turn rights here by the school oh rall have a drink cuz it’s hot this is quite a nice Lane that’s not too demanding right over there on the fields there’s Emily more television M and radio M and phone M and whatever [Applause] looking about Hearts right on my garment the medic’s recording against my mom on uh Wednesday um cuz when she when I she was in hospital on Saturday her heart was down to 35 beats a minute and yet on Wednesday it rocketed up to 140 per minute something something f FIB ulation or something apparently but it’s not good when you’re 97 years old I went to visit her yesterday and she was on a bad mood she was hating the car home hating everyone there didn’t see any points in being alive decided she was just waiting to die and she didn’t see any points in oh God went on and on it’s so depressing and it you just don’t know what to do you know I couldn’t take her out because she wasn’t 100% so that’s part of the reason we’re turning right here by the way but also cuz the community health Team were coming in again but I haven’t heard from them so I can only assume they either didn’t or everything is okay anyway my son’s visiting her this afternoon and staff members at the car home did try to cheer him up for quite a long time actually they’re really good right before too long we take a left along a lane which at the end it plunges down into that lovely wood land and then we climb up out of it and cross the peniston Bley Railway I don’t know if you can see it there’s a good view of the Emily more mask mask mask with a t there we turn left here oh they’ve done 9 and 1 half miles so far I’m looking to do about between 20 and 25 no more than that at the moment and on a hilly rise it’s counterproductive otherwise he takes longer to recover when I do backto back hilly rides in Devon I really notice it by the middle of the week you got to be careful I often take a day off now in the middle of the week when I’m away maybe do a gentle walk or something I know younger faster lighter cyclists with lighter bikes we probably think nothing of doing 30 35 40 50 60 miles a day but not me bikes not made for it tires it’s too heavy and the tires are quite heavy and wide I’m too heavy and I’m too old and I you can’t go fast on Lanes like this I don’t like cycling on main roads now then cling into the pretty Woodland which is as pretty as anything you get in De ter rosace so oh that really is must take it easy cuz it could easily skid like I did last year on wet sand once spit and twice shall last time I did this ride the peniston ride that I recorded I just cycled past the little mini Reservoir Lake thing which was a shame because there was a heron on the bank which I could see but I didn’t stop don’t know if I’ll stop this time but I might it’s just here cuz it’s a waterfall come on let’s stop let’s take a look can you see the waterfall I hope you can and it’s coming from this little Lake up [Applause] here you see the lake [Applause] it’s def doesn’t look as though many people use that lake so nice here anyway onwards and upwards you can’t cut off to towards dumale my turning right here I’ve never done that but again I might incorporate it into another ride h W hand I hurt keep riding over rocks slow down for the climb relax shoulders relax elbows h bit rest SP before the next time coming up h h [Applause] bit of rest F again [Applause] I think there’s another bit of climbing after the farmouse w there a train or it might be F machine yeah another bit of time coming up not too bad ah okay it’s a tractor not a train but the rway is up here bit more of a climb this is why we cross the rilway ahe on the railways down in the curing h all right we near be at the top it wasn’t too bad really it wasn’t too bad it was better than last time I did it few weeks ago so must be getting fter draged sound so easy to Skid on it and once you do you just got to go with the flow and over you go not good oh I said it was the top but we’re not at the top yet we’re nearly at the top of this section oh when we get to the road the main road we turn right and then before long left into ing Borth which is pronounced like that apparently h we don’t get many opportunities to go into the Big Chain ring here but just done it for a short short section here in Borth well the res of where is and well we climb steadily for a while before before heading away from the the route from the peniston ride the other week we’re going left here Margaret I get really nervous when I slide slide a bit takes me back to the last summer and that’s another reason why you’d never rush these rides that I do it’s impossible you’d be a lunatic one of one of the many reasons oh no scarecrow Festival this time again [Applause] [Applause] trans panine Trail continues up there very difficult or impossible to ride on a road bike or even a bike like those switches called an adventure bike stroke gravel bike gravel bike that’s what I slit on wasn’t it wet sand wet gravel [Applause] let we meet meet the the other lane we turn left he h so we Are Climbing steadily now we skirt the reservoir which will be on our right in a moment we briefly return to ring Borth later in the ride before heading off towards deid Dale bit of nice rest by it flattish this gives you a chance to recover his stamina all right climbing gently now why not so gently oh [Applause] I think this is where the reservoir begins it’s just the road across this uh Dam water’s nice and blue like it was last time beautiful hello a oh this bits a bit easier beautiful blue water on the rice it is gorgeous it’s quite low as well surprising considering all the rain we’ve had bit of a bumpy surface here rock all right now we begin a proper gradual climb w oh hi w h w well we’re heading towards 950 elevation fet probably reach a thousand I imagine before we turn off oops just checking the house on my camera it’s I I said it’s a bit wonky at the moment if we can’t repair it I’ll send it back to Amazon right the end here we take a right and then a left h a and left theor along here we leave the route we did on the other ride and head off on the right up a lane still climbing 9 78 fet I’m going up th fet I’m climbing h [Applause] oh still close com in [Applause] [Applause] oh muszle planks make sure not w 1,60 ft and then there’s another climb about after a bit of rest by yes w getting a bit windy up here not surprisingly they all the pen on that’s real w w [Music] we turn right at the junction and then me turn right again was on the peniston ride we continued and went downhill to Victoria before climbing up to the reservoirs in Dunford bridge and down the peniston rail track so we’ll be going in the opposite direction it’s ni here I don’t know if you can see the MOs ahead w I think this is where we turn right he is where we turn right h I can see the MOs all around hopefully soon we’ll beit the highest point on this ride my man’s s for feet and a bit of respite ah yes the rewards for hill climbing but hey it looks like the sun nor has this ride takes us to the top of the terrible clim I did up from heith last year which was a Absolut brutal climb I had to walk my bike up most of it apparently it’s notorious but when he gets to the top it’s so easy right we go straight ahead of the giveway he and then they go well it’s looks like straight on there it’s left up to that building on the left on top of the hill yes the hill [Music] one more Hill and I think after that it’s fairly easy going apart from I don’t quite know what will happen in the run into dadel cuz I’ve not done it before if I was climbing up out of it the chances are I’ll be going downhill and probably climb to the at the end to the road right there we go another Hill that’s is the turning point on the ride what beautiful views they must have oh no something big coming down it’s go up it say d [Applause] h a on my he F tablets don’t seem to be working oh well oh my a big boy that is oh so down there as it drops it’s l literally like a precipice drops down to the Village of Heth which is one of those Peno villages with very very steep lanes and houses built on different levels and and when you when you cycle there and you see the climb ahead you think oh please no not up there but yes it is so I advise don’t do it unless you’re a total masochist or professional cyclist I think the top of the climb is just up here on the left somewhere I think we turn right yeah let’s check it little that time yeah that was about 1200 ft just 10 ft below we might get the 1200 at the top of this mini climb d 1200 ft bang on and I think that’s the top oh 12:02 so I mean it can get obsessed with these garments that’s why I stopped using one well I stopped last summer I just relied on the straa so you can’t tell how many miles you’ve done until you get home or how many feet unless of course you have that mounted up right we go straight ahead here yes the good thing about straw them is it tells me when I when I do a ride when I save a ride on straa as opposed to through the Garment up um straa tells me I’ve burn about double the number of calories and I like that we like stve whereas the Garin is a bit mean when it comes to cibs but then it does take into account your heart rate doesn’t it and yes we’re on to the Big Chain ring and we’re level with Emily Mo TV Mas over that Nest over there oh we found this wonderful wonderful SE I love this time of view you got a lot of poppies which reminds me of the war which reminds me I never got to tell you the the World War II facts about Cannon Hall but I do that when I do another ride around here think we’re back to the trans penine Trail signs the blue signs we going straight ahead again oh a little bit of a hill coming up can seeing buch with Reservoir down there I never know if you can see it or not with this camera a mini climb can you see the reservoir w let we get to the road which is the road we met after the woodlands climb and across the Railway Bridge earlier on we take a right for a while and then we go left h h oh m I think let we turn left here yes the upper dendi oh it’s sh oh Co he a on h we take the fork to Z yeah right if we were to take the right hand Fork that goes the other side of the pub the dunker Pub that would join the route later on that we started our time oh should be a to see the TV Master any more now I say I’ve never been down here but actually I have when I did a cycle ride from Andy ah cook Still Road which must be near the cooks through a lane where the pies used to be made that cook still Farmhouse I might have been so I might have been down this road it’s probably not a ride I would have done again because it had a brutal clim back up to Emily look and this I think is D Dale so we’re back in J Dale and on our right coming up is the pie Hall trans to remember one p herey yeah [Music] a [Music]

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