Archive | October 2020

Patterdale to Haweswater – Play Misty for Me

It was cold and it rained and I felt like an actor. Thanks David. Then it stopped raining at around 3am and with a strong wind the tent dried out. I was fully dressed in my sleeping bag with my hat on so I was snug, but the wind made the tent shake and the noise made it difficult to sleep for long periods. The view from the tent was good.

The rain held off whilst I packed the tent away and I got a hot chocolate and bacon bap from the campsite. Warmed and positive I set off down the road a stretch and then up, and up to Hayeswater, high in the hills, and then up on to tops. The Knott stands at 2,400 feet, and you can see for miles from the summit…Knott!

The wind was wild on the top. My path joined an old Roman road, and what the bloody hell they were doing up here Jove only knows. The wind ripped the rain cover off my rucksack and it’s at around 15,000 feet now dodging planes. Luckily it didn’t rain for the rest of the walk. The High Street (Roman road) is on the edge of seriously steep drops, and with the wind I was glad when I turned off past Kidsty Pike, at nearly 2,600 feet high, and took a long descent down to Haweswater.

The route down was difficult in areas and I went a pisser but luckily didn’t bang my head or break any bones. Just injured pride and muddy legs. It’s easy to slip when the land is like this, and wet.

Looking back up the valley towards the peaks the view was dramatic.

At long last down by the lake the wind dropped and I was able to make decent time on the path round the north bank. Goodbye to the Lakes.

As I approached the bottom of the valley I heard a chirping in the trees. There were red squirrels warning each other of my approach. They looked great, and one held on a branch quite close until I got my iPad out for a photo and then buggered off before I could snap him. I got the sign though.

Today was 13 miles again, and worth every yard for a night with a roof over my head at the Crown and Mitre, Bampton Grange. The owners opened just for me, gave me solo access to the bar (which usually only opens at weekends) and they cooked me an evening meal. Great service. And a nice room too.

Night night.

Thirlmere to Hartsop – Bagging a Hatful!

I packed away my wet tent in the light rain after a difficult night. I drink from streams and mostly it’s ok but this time my stomach was so painful that I went to defecate in the night. More successfully than my previous experience with urination but said defecation was rather explosive. Weakened I set off late at 9.30am hundred hours.

The route would take me up from the campsite for three miles, non-stop climbing, to the summit of Hellvellyn. The third highest peak in England. It was so wet and cold I didn’t take a photo going up, although there wasn’t much to see but cloud. With the rucksack I struggled, particularly with my upset stomach. Upset? It was furious! Eventually, sometime after noon, the summit showed.

Hellvellyn summit

That is all five of the highest peaks in England that I’ve climbed this week. Feels great. Then to come down the other side. A walker had warned me not to take the two steepest routes as they could be deadly with a rucksack. Thankfully I found a safe, slightly longer one, as the clouds lightened slightly.

Archetypal Lakeland hillsides

I soon dropped down a zigzag path and looked back at brooding and largely hidden Hellvellyn. I’d come along the ridge on the right of the photo before dropping down.

I was approaching Glenridding on Ullswater lake, nestling in the valley.

I was feeling warmer, it had stopped raining and I was happy. The waterfalls were not spectacular for this neck of the woods, but they were still a constant feature.

And just before reaching Glenridding there was a massive expanse of historical lead and copper mines and waste heaps.

Glenridding is nice.

I stopped at a tea room for a defrosting hot chocolate.

And a quick gander at St Patrick’s Well. Of course he is. He’s not daft enough to drink from streams.

A four mile march up the valley to my campsite and hopefully a good night’s sleep. A rainy week to come but I’ve got a roof over my head tomorrow and Tuesday. Joy of joys. Thirteen miles today, including 3,116 feet of Hellvellyn. Not bad old lad.

Night night.

Great Langdale to Thirlmere – via the site of indecent exposure

It was a very clear and cold night. My tent is ok and watertight, so the condensation from my breathing stays inside, but the rain stays out. In the middle of the night I unzipped the inner tent and the outer zip for a pee. The Milky Way was in my face. Stunning. I laid back down and the sleeping bag felt wet. My shirt and jumper that I wear 24/7 felt wet. So did my shorts. I hadn’t fired out far enough and the watertight nature of the tent had retained my discharged liquid. It frickin stank, so did my shorts, shirt, jumper and sleeping bag.

At least when I’m having a meal in an Inn the staff can identify me. ‘Take the fish and chips to that old bloke in the corner who stinks of piss’.

I think I’ve brought too much stuff. It’s a struggle up these steep hills. Hey ho!

Nearly 50 years ago on a geography field trip from school I ran up the hill to Stickle Tarn, way ahead of the group, stripped off, dived in and swam around. It was Easter and snow was melting into the Tarn. A party of girls came round where I was swimming so I stopped out there for 15 minutes until they all fricked off. By that time my mates had come up, photographed me swimming and coming out, holding my bits, which hurt like the devil had started to bite them off. I’m going back for the first time since then. Fully clothed.

Another dry start to the day and the route up was beautiful.

The top of the pass to Stickle Tarn

A long, hard slog with my rucksack. But eventually I got there.

The scene of crime

And looking out and back down the valley….

From here it was a direct route north up to Blea Ridge with a cold, cold wind. At least it blew the smell of piss away from my nose! And from the top was a panorama. With Stickle Tarn down below and Morecambe Bay in the distance.

Again, heading due north over a plateau, the occasional groups of walkers evaporated. The views didn’t.

I had to drop down from here through a valley leading to Thirlmere Lake. And it was a seriously long, boggy and arduous slog. When it wasn’t boggy it was a scramble. No wonder I saw no-one all afternoon. Part way down the valley a huge stag was braying for a rut. Loud as a foghorn. His concubines were hanging around him looking gorgeous but I decided not to throw my hat in the ring. In fact I fricked off quick before he could challenge me, and sadly before I could take a photo.

And then the valley dropped further at the end.

At the head of Thirlemere was a path that ran along the side of Hellvellyn, and parallel to the lake, to my campsite. Lovely views of the lake, through the rain that started mid-afternoon.

Twelve tough miles. Took me nearly 8 hours! Then pitching my tent in the rain and dashing into the hotel next to the site, and bagging a table for one in the fully booked restaurant. Sometimes it pays to look old and pathetic. Luckily they didn’t smell the piss before I took my seat.

Night night.

Wasdale Head to Great Langdale – how pleasant it is.

Thanks Dennis Brown.

Well, a good day today but a poor result on paper. Only 8 miles and it took me fewer hours than I thought it would. Less hours is ok.

The day was cloudy, dry, but chilly throughout, although it started with a Muthafarter of a breakfast. The Wasdale Head Full Breakfast, with toast and tea. I was away by 09.45am hundred hours, with my pack feeling heavy but my heart feeling light.

Up the route I’d taken on Wednesday, the higher route, with a great last view of Scafell Pike to the right and Base Camp back down below.

Scafell Pike summit lurking in the distance
The Wasdale Head Inn below the sun spot

It’s hard at clickety clicks with a 16kg backpack and a steep endless climb, but you just need to concentrate on the next yard, take short steps and control your breathing. And eventually you are up, over the brow and onto the next phase of the climb.

Looking back to Great Gable

And eventually, with a sweat on my back from the rucksack, and a cold wind in my face, over the top of the pass and looking towards the Langdale Pikes on the left and Windermere in the distance.

Great Langdale ahead

It was a bitter wind, but it eased as I dropped down towards Angle Tarn, with Esk Pike standing guard behind.

Angle Tarn

When you’ve got a high opinion of yourself, like me, you get disappointed that the climbs are difficult and the descents are painful. When you’ve got a low opinion of yourself, like me, you expect to be crap at everything. The joys of being a Gemini.

One last climb up to the top of a pass beyond Angle Tarn and then a long drop to Great Langdale. What a great example of a glacial valley. They churned through here as recently as 30,000 years ago. That’s when Sheffield Wednesday were last in the Premiership.

I’d done well because it was a big climb and it was a difficult descent to the valley floor. I’d done very poorly, as most people would expect, and talk about behind my back.

The ice covered this area and ground out the valleys. As it receded, as the glaciers melted, it dropped big mounds of earth that it had carried along for millennia. Here are great examples. They’re called Drumlins and you can see them in the picture below. Waiting for me like huge Anglo Saxon burial mounds. If the Dead call me in please summon Tom Bombadil. Thanks, beyond any thanks we can give in middle earth, John. Nearly fifty years of sheer joy.

From here it was slog, down to the campsite in the trees on the far left. Overlooked by the majestic Langdale Pikes.

And looking back in the middle is the pass I came over from Angle Tarn.

A great day. Under canvass tonight for the first time this trip.

Night night.

Sca Fell Climbed Today – Slowly but Surely

Another beautiful morning. I awoke with great pains and strains in my legs after yesterday’s efforts. I reckon I did 12 miles but I didn’t set my garmin wristwatch right that the family bought me for my birthday so it’s an educated guess. BSc(Econ) with honours. Douglas Hurd. The pain came from the up and down rather than the along.

Looking up the valley from Base Camp

Today’s goal is the second highest mountain in England, Sca Fell, and from here it’s a bugger to get to when your legs are aching. But then again I’m here and up for it. A reyt good breakfast. He ate all the toast, he ate all the toast, big fat baastad, big fat baastad, he ate all the toast. Ha! Well then simpletons. I’ve lost 12lbs in three weeks so best see the new me before slinging mud.

I set off just before 10am, taking it steady and deliberately today. The route would take me up the hillside opposite the Inn and then round it into the valley leading up to Scafell Pike and Scafell.

Looking down the valley it was lovely but cold. Going up, the hill was still in the shade up the Scafell valley.

Scafell Pike straight ahead and Sca Fell hidden to the right.

It was a long slog up to a landbridge between Scafell Pike and Scafell, which I had to climb over to get to Scafell peak. I managed it but it was a bit dodgy. And looking back down the valley from the top was great.

And looking forward, apologies for the over-exposure.

I had to drop down a couple of hundred feet into this valley to find a climbing route up to the Sca Fell summit. I couldn’t find the route but luckily from out of nowhere sprang Geoff in his green boiler suit.

Geoff showed me the way to the gully I had to climb up. It was frickin scary. He stayed at the bottom whilst I climbed up to the next safe step. He was from Lancashire and might have been waiting to rob the fallen body of any valuables. Only kidding Geoff.

I don’t know if you can see him, he’s just a tiny splash of green and red at the bottom of this gully, which is a measure of the height of this climb.

At the top was Foxes Tarn, a small puddle in a big, natural amphitheatre just a quarter of a mile from the summit.

The sides were steep again and part way up the view down and around was amazing.

And then, finally after nearly four hours of climbing, I made it to the summit.

Sca Fell summit with Scafell Pike in the background

The views from the top were great.

And after a rest in the sun, which had warmed up the air considerably, I was ready to set off back to Base Camp, down the western side of the mountain. And it was chuffing murder. Wobbling down through loose scree and boulders, which tore holes in my boots. The scree went on and on. But the views were amazing.

In the end I made it down in three hours, and my legs were like jelly from the wobbling rocks and the bogland below, which seeped through the holes in my boots. Looking back the boulders looked innocuous, but it was bigger and far steeper than it seems.

I came upon another amazing view. Have you ever seen a pile of turd as big as this? I think we should put it in an identity parade with five others and get the Queen Mother to sniff them to identify the culprit. Thanks Pete.

Eventually the Inn rode over the horizon. Hooray!

Eight miles today and it took eight hours. Tough, tough going. Early night tonight to get ready for the journey to Great Langdale tomorrow. Alright my darlings.

Night night.

Nailed It! – Scafell Range

. I nailed it today and felt fit as a young person might feel. I’m 66 you know! Sixty six – clickety click. Oh those heady days of bingo on North Sea Ferries.

You might have gathered that I had a good day.

Breakfast at the Inn was great…..Yeeeeessss!!!!!! Give me clogged arteries any day of the week. And the day was cool but beautifully dry.

Apparently St Olaf, the patron saint of Norway, came over to these parts over 1,000 years ago to help build defences against the Saxons for the local Viking community. This is St Olaf’s church, rebuilt 1550 but there’s been a church on the site since 950AD.

I decided today to head up Wasdale, over the top, and cut back towards Scafell Pike (highest peak in England), scrambling up Ill Crag and Broad Crag (4th and 5th highest peaks) on the way. And the scenery was like this.

The lower path wandered up the valley, but I took a higher route so that I was higher up when I began to feel tired. A good strategy from a wily old fox.

Looking back was lovely, seeing Wast Water in the early morning.

I made really good time, without a rucksack, and the Inn soon shrank.

It was a long slog up to the top of the valley, and beyond it was another world of higher moorland and mountain peaks. Really lovely stuff. And looking back the way I’d climbed was great.

Then I turned round and looked to my right as I was climbing.

How good is this? Windy up here, cold and essential that I got my scarf, gloves and woolly hat on. But nowt else. Schooldays.

And looking in the other direction… Keswick in the distance.

Eventually I reached the top of the pass where the land dropped down towards Morecambe Bay in the far distance, but I turned right, up another mountain side, before the drop. Half a mile of steep climb took me to Ill Crag, the 4th highest peak in England. The view from the top was great, all the way down to the sea.

I scrambled over and up the northern side of the Scafell range to the peak of Broad Crag, the 5th highest peak in England, with lovely views again.

Then the last long push across the range to drop down a few hundred feet before a steep climb to the exposed summit of Scafell Pike, the highest mountain in England. It was windy and cold and there were a lot of day walkers. It brassed me off that other folk were there. I’d come up the long and arduous back route. These folk had climbed the less difficult front route. Maybe I should relax more. But the real summit was rough.

Three of the highest five in England. I’ll settle for that today. I set off down but there were so many folk climbing up the main route that I pushed off it, round towards the valley I had walked up. It was a rough route but eventually I met up with The Corridor, a half decent path, with great views of my route up.

Eventually I was back at the Inn. Great day, three out of the top 5. Great day. 

Night night.

Blade goes West to East / Coast to Coast

My original intention this time was to walk the Cape Wrath Trail again, using a different route closer to the Scottish west coast but still through remote areas. With a severe lockdown on hospitality in Sweaty Sockland I decided to switch to the English Coast to Coast path, which crosses from the Irish Sea in the west, through the Lake District, Yorkshire Dales and North Yorkshire Moors to Robin Hood’s Bay on the North Sea coast. It’s just under 200 miles but I’ve added a bit.

To my shame I’ve not spent much time in the Lakes so I decided to start further south than the classic route, walk inland to a base in Wasdale for three nights and climb the five highest peaks in England. Then I’ll set off for the east coast. How super! Jesus. This blog is boring me.

I got a train from Leeds to Seascale this morning at 6am and arrived, after two changes, at noon. £10. Bargain of the month! On the last leg the Isle of Man was clear out west and Scotland was visible up north.

Isle of Man out halfway to Ireland


Sweaty Sockland in the distance

Doing the Coast to Coast (C2C) it’s traditional to dip a part of your anatomy in the Irish and North Seas. I’ve put two vids up as I had to cut out very rude language in the middle.

It was decent walking weather, cool and dry, and it was great to get a trek underway for the first time in 13 months, with a rucksack on my back. The route was all road walking for 12 miles but for a first day that was great, and I was a bit loaded up.

Loaded old git

Gosforth was a decent village with an old church and a jolly graveyard. The headstones and caskets were reeling around. They’re having fun under there!

Another 5 miles and I was well and truly in the Lake District. I couldn’t get the smile off my face. It was frickin frozen on by the wind.

Wast Water
Illgill Head

And just when I was getting tired and cold from the incessant headwind……… my lodgings appeared! It’s a good spot. The food is pub food, the rooms are adequate and the bed is brilliant. Hooray!!!

The End of the Road

Tomorrow is a climbing day. Can’t frickin wait.

Night night.