As a special project to mark
my retirement from teaching in 2015, I am going to hike the Coast to Coast Walk
from August 23 to September 5, 2015 — fourteen days of walking through some of
the most beautiful areas of northern England.
The Coast to Coast Walk was
devised by famed fellwalker Alfred Wainwright in 1972. Although it is one of
the most popular long-distance trails in the UK (equivalent to the Bruce Trail
in Ontario, which runs from Niagara to Tobermory), the Coast to Coast is not an
official, national trail. It runs for 192 miles (309 km) across the northern
neck of England, traversing three very different — and very beautiful — national
parks: the Lake District National Park in Cumbria, near the north-west coast;
the Yorkshire Dales National Park, which also has the Pennine Way running
through it; and the North York Moors National Park, which is close to the
north-east coast.
The Coast to Coast Walk crosses England from the coast of Cumbria to the coast of Yorkshire |
Most hikers who tackle the
trail walk it west-to-east, in order to keep the wind and the sun behind them.
The trail begins, therefore, on the west coast of England in St. Bees, Cumbria
- a small village on the north-west coast, about five miles (eight km) south of
the town of Whitehaven. St. Bees overlooks the Irish Sea, with the Isle of Man
lying to the west about half-way between the English coast and Northern Ireland.
The Coast to Coast Walk ends on the east coast in the Yorkshire village of
Robin Hood's Bay, about five miles (eight km) south-east of Whitby, overlooking
the North Sea.
Alfred Wainwright walking the Lakeland fells |
Alfred Wainwright was born
in Blackburn, Lancashire in 1907. He was raised in the city and began his
working career there as an accountant. Even as a young lad he was a keen
long-distance walker. He also showed an early interest in cartography and
drawing. Wainwright's long love-affair with the fells (hills) of the Lake
District began in 1930, at the age of 23. He spent a week's holiday there with
his cousin Eric Beardsall. In 1941 he moved to the Lake District, taking a cut
in pay to do so, working as an accountant in the Borough Treasury Office in
Kendal, Westmorland. He would live and work in Kendal until his retirement in
1967. He died in 1991.
In 1952 Wainwright began
work on the first of seven hikers' guides to the fells of the Lake District.
The series was dubbed A Pictorial Guide
to the Lakeland Fells. The first — a guide to the Eastern fells — came out
in 1955. Six more volumes followed over the next 11 years, an average of a book
every two years. He produced about one page every evening. These guides are
unique because all of the illustrations and maps are hand drawn by the author,
and the text also features Wainwright's own hand-lettering, instead of being
printed using a traditional typeface.
Wainwright came up with the
idea of a west-to-east hiking trail across the neck of England in 1972. He had prepared
a book about the Pennine Way in his own inimitable style back in 1968. The
Pennine Way runs south-to-north for 267 miles (429 km) up the northern spine of
England, from Edale in the Derbyshire Peak District, through the Yorkshire
Dales and the Northumberland National Park, ending just short of the Scottish
border. Wainwright wasn't that enamoured with that particular trail; in some
closing comments at the end of his Coast to Coast book, he describes the
Pennine Way as "far longer and a greater
challenge to stamina, but most of it lies over dreary moorlands." The
Coast to Coast trail, on the other hand, he writes, "is, in my opinion,
immeasurably superior in scenic qualities although it has no Hadrian's Wall to
stimulate the imagination ... [It] is enjoyable for its beauty, for the
dramatic variations of landscape, and for its many interesting relics, some
rooted in prehistory." He concludes his comparison of the two trails with
this pithy statement: "I finished the Pennine Way with relief, the Coast
to Coast walk with regret. That's the difference."
It took Alfred Wainwright a
year to plan and explore his Coast to Coast trail. His scheme contained four
main objectives: to avoid towns; to link together the three National Parks
already there; to keep to high ground wherever it was practicable; and to use
only rights of way and areas of open access. His book, A Coast to Coast Walk: A Pictorial Guide was completed and
published in 1973 by the Westmorland Gazette. Because of legal restrictions
that arose later (after land changed hands), and increasing traffic, and land
erosion, the trail has had to be regularly re-routed over the years. Four
revised editions of the guide have been published since 1973; the most recent was published by
Frances Lincoln of London in 2003.
Wainwright divided the Coast
to Coast route into 12 stages. His idea was to have each stage end in a place
where overnight accommodation would be available. Most of the stages he came up
with began and ended with low ground, and included a single up-and-down stretch
during the course of the day's hike. A couple of the stages were much longer
than the average, and included more than one extended spell of steep walking. The
majority of walkers these days tackle the trail in 14 or 15 stages. Hiking the
trail every day for two weeks means a daily average of 14 miles (22 km). If you
hike at an average speed of 2.5-3.0 miles/hour (depending on how much change of
elevation you have to deal with), that means a daily hike of about seven hours.
It needs to be emphasized,
of course, that although Wainwright's trail is laid out in a careful and
efficient way, there is no exact route you have to follow, and no single method
of negotiating one's course across the country. The idea is to take the general
idea, but to innovate as the whim takes you, or to adjust your plan in response
to vagaries of circumstance — whether of human or natural causes. Our own approach,
however, is set firmly by the pre-arranging all of our B&B and hotel
accommodation. The main idea is to set oneself a challenge, but also to enjoy the
entire process for its own sake. You're only going to do it once — presumably —
so get the most out of it while you can.
My friends Michael and Tony,
with whom I attended boarding school in the mid-to-late '60s, will be my
companions on this grand hiking adventure. We will be walking the Coast to
Coast trail for 14 straight days from August 23rd. to September 5th. Follow our
progress daily on this blog!
Resources: A Coast to Coast Walk - Revised Edition
(2003) by A. Wainwright, published by Frances Lincoln, London; Coast to Coast Path - Sixth Edition by
Henry Stedman, published by Trailblazer Publications; Harvey Map XT40: Coast to Coast West (St. Bees to Keld)
and Harvey Map XT40: Coast to Coast East (Keld
to Robin Hood's Bay); B&B and hotel bookings and daily luggage-ferrying
by Macs Adventure.
Sounds great - I might join you!
ReplyDeleteMichael
Have an enjoyable walk, Clive. Regards to your companions.
ReplyDeleteAnd of course a wonderful retirement.
Wow - looks fabulous Clive! I really look forward to getting your updates en-route. Enjoy and take good care! rk
ReplyDeleteHi Clive, I do wish only that I could join you on this wonderful walk. Do enjoy this adventure.
ReplyDeleteHi Clive. When you said you were taking a trip to England, you neglected to mention this grand adventure you were about to undertake. Like the others, I also wish I was going with you. Do keep us posted! Ed (and Jo).
ReplyDeleteClive, when I first started reading Tony's post, I knew you would be one of the two friends he walked with. What a wonderful experience!
ReplyDelete