A Walk Across England
In the 1970s, British accountant Alfred Wainwright linked back roads, rights-of-way and ancient footpaths to blaze a beguiling trail across the sceptered isle
- By Michael Parfit
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2003, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 7)
"Coast to coast, are ye?" said an elderly man with a cane and a collie as we walked into Sandwith. "Going to do it all?"
"Yes," we answered.
"Oh," he said, shaking his head. "You'll be tired." He reached into his pocket and gave us a roll of mints.
Both sobered and fortified, we set off toward green hillsides, now shrouded in rain, and started uphill. Soon it became steep and slippery. "Never believe Wainwright when he says ‘gentle climb,' " another walker wrote in a guest book we saw later in a hotel in Robin Hood's Bay.
Alfred Wainwright's vocation perhaps explains the tidiness of his many guidebooks and his occasional grim understatement. He was born in 1907 and raised in the gritty textile city of Blackburn, northwest of Manchester. In 1931 he married a woman named Ruth Holden, who worked in a textile mill. They had a son, whom they named Peter, but the couple had little in common, and they soon ran out of even friendship. "He had ruined her life," Wainwright wrote in a short story that was clearly autobiographical, "just as surely as he had ruined his own." A.W., as he preferred to be called, began to indulge in dreams of one day finding a different—and perfect—female companion he termed "she whom he loved." But the romance he found was with a place, and it was decidedly not comfortable: the mountainous north of England.
On the ascent from the west, A.W.'s guidebook told us as our pace slowed in the first climb, "it is the sudden revelation of the Lakeland fells that rivets the attention." For him the introduction to the Lake District, when he came here for a week's holiday in 1930, riveted his whole life to the fells. "I saw mountain ranges," he wrote, "one after another, the nearer starkly etched, those beyond fading into the blue distance. Rich woodlands, emerald pastures and the shimmering waters of the lake below added to a pageant of loveliness. . . . "
For us the pageant of the first park, Lake DistrictNational Park, was limited and wet. We had walked into what a 60-ish, shirtless British hiker later told us was "a bit of heavy dew." In other words, ropes of rain.
We wore full rain gear, but as the shirtless Brit might have said, we were nevertheless a bit damp when we climbed a sodden hillside after a walk of 131/2 miles and arrived at a bedand-breakfast called Low Cock How Farm. A long white building with a dripping slate roof and four tractors in the front yard, the establishment was pleasantly crowded with 11 other equally wet walkers. Their clothing and ours soon festooned the place, hanging from nails in beams near the fireplace. But the baths were enormous, the hot water abundant and the company congenial. In one of the bathrooms we found a bottle labeled "M-RMuscle Embrocation. Ideal for Horses and Dogs." It was nearly empty.
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Comments (5)
One of my dreams was to walk this trail. I'm older now and physically can't do it. Reading through this information has made it seem that I was taking the journey today.
Posted by Joyce E. Ebersold on August 8,2010 | 09:23 AM
My husband and I did this walk in July/August 2005. It took us two weeks. We met many international visitors on the same walk. Some days we traveled with the same people. Other days we would see no one. And then...we would meet up with people again. It was a wonderful experience. We were so glad to have taken this walk. We have often thought that we would like to do it again. When we were in the Yorkshire Dales we came upon our worst travel days due to the weather; however, we didn't have too many other bad days throughout our walk. Be prepared to be challenged along the way. Some of the walk is fairly steep. The highest point was about 2,500 ft. It was absolutely beautiful.
Posted by Marita and Ed O'Dell on September 25,2009 | 02:00 PM
cool beans
Posted by patrick doss on June 17,2009 | 02:14 PM
i would just like to say thanks for sharing your walk ,it reminded me of happy times, best Regards ern
Posted by ernest smith on March 2,2009 | 03:24 PM
I have been searching around in the World Wide Web for useful information. Though shorter than many other blogs on this topic which I have read, this is a very nice article. I too plan to do this walk soon. http://masug.blogspot.com
Posted by Manoj Sugathan on December 16,2008 | 01:06 AM