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
When an English accountant named Alfred Wainwright first went to the lonely hills of northern England in 1930, he was a lonely man. But the cool, empty vistas of moor and mountain must have soaked up his own emptiness like a sponge, because the hills were where he found love.
Today, many people walk in the footsteps of Alfred Wainwright, whose passion for the mountains turned him from accountant into author. The reason is simple: Wainwright, who died at age 84 in 1991, wrote a series of guidebooks to walks through the wildest landscapes in Britain. One book in particular created a now-famous route through heather and woods, over stiles, past lakes, among sheep and across ridges in the face of horizontal rain, from one coast of England to the other.
The route is called the Coast to Coast. It's a walk through history and time, across an England that seems not to have changed in hundreds of years. But the trip is also a journey of companionship, and the most familiar friend is Wainwright himself, who walked alone.
Recently, my wife, Suzanne, and I decided to follow in his footsteps. As it was for Wainwright, it was a map that first intrigued us. "Give me a map of country I do not know," he wrote, "and it has the power to thrill and excite me."
The maps he made of the Coast to Coast walk are wonderfully appealing, with intricate dotted route and contour lines, bushy marks for bogs, notes for gates and barns, alternate routes to mountains (called fells), and drawings of outcrops, tarns (lakes) and waterfalls. Wainwright said he began making maps so that by looking at them, he could "go on fell walking in spirit long after my legs had given up." He didn't know that it would not be his legs that would betray him in the end, but his eyes.
As we looked at the maps at home, they showed a long wriggle of a route, starting in northwest England at the village of St. Bees on the Irish Sea and leading out into delightful imaginary distances, through three of Britain's finest national parks, to the village of Robin Hood's Bay, 190 miles away on the North Sea. But at the start of our walk, on a cool morning under a gathering overcast, the maps suddenly turned real and the distances long.
We began, as most walkers do, in St. Bees. We had been planning the trip for more than a year, delayed by the scourge of foot-and-mouth disease, which roared like wildfire through this part of Britain, closing trails and leaving farm and tourist economies in shambles. But now the fields were clean and the gates were open. We stood on an expanse of low-tide beach and, as Coast to Coast tradition demands, let gentle little Irish Sea waves wet the soles of our boots.
After a magnificent first five miles along sea cliffs, among sounds of waves and gulls, we walked up a quiet lane into the village of Sandwith. It was like many of the villages we would soon encounter: a cluster of white cottages, two pubs, a patch of green with a picnic table, and a farm road leading east. It felt as if we had already shed the hasty part of time and were immersed in Britain's ancient, slower flow of days and hours in which all travel moved at the pace of feet or hooves, and the space between villages was set by the distance a person could walk in a day.
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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