Coast to Coast Walk

From Wikishire
Revision as of 21:37, 18 May 2015 by RB (talk | contribs) (→‎Yorkshire fells and dales)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
St Bees beach – the start of the walk

The Coast to Coast Walk is a 192-mile unofficial and mostly unsignposted long-distance trail across Cumberland, Westmorland and Yorkshire, from the Irish Sea coast to the North Sea coast. It was devised by Alfred Wainwright. The walk begins in the west at St Bees Head in Cumberland (54°29’31"N, 3°36’43"W) and finishes in the east at Robin Hood's Bay in the North Riding of Yorkshire (54°26’6"N, -0°32’6"W).

The walk passes through three counties and three national parks: the Lake District National Park, the Yorkshire Dales National Park, and the North York Moors National Park. Its highest point is Kidsty Pike in Westmorland, at 2,560 feet above sea level.

Wainwright recommends that walkers dip their booted feet in the Irish Sea at St Bees and, at the end of the walk, in the North Sea at Robin Hood's Bay.

History and status

The Coast to Coast was originally described by Alfred Wainwright in his 1973 book A Coast to Coast Walk. Due to legal restrictions on certain stretches of the path, increased traffic on some of the road sections, and erosion, the exact original route followed by Wainwright is not recommended. Wainwright's book has been revised a number of times in recent years (most recently in 2003) to provide a route that avoids trespass.

The route uses a variety of public rights of way including public footpaths, tracks, and minor roads.

Wainwright's book describes the route in 12 stages, each of which ends at a settlement with at least some overnight accommodation nearby. If one stage is walked per day, with one or two rest days, the route makes a two-week holiday, and web logs of coast-to-coasters seem to indicate that this is the most common way of walking the route. However, Wainwright explicitly states that he did not intend people to necessarily stick to these daily stages, or even to his route. For instance, the majority of Wainwright's stages start and end at low level with a single up-down during the day: many walkers split the Borrowdale–Patterdale stage at Grasmere in order to maintain this pattern and avoid having two major uphill sections in one day. Splitting two or three more of the longer stages, and adding a further one or two rest days, reduces the average day-length to 10 or 12 miles and makes the walk a much easier three-week trip with time to "stand and stare", an activity much approved of by Wainwright.

I want to encourage in others the ambition to devise with the aid of maps their own cross-country marathons and not be merely followers of other people's routes: there is no end to the possibilities for originality and initiative.

—A. Wainwright, A Coast to Coast Walk

The Coast to Coast Walk has not been enrolled as an official “National Trail” but that does not stop it from being one of the most popular of all the long-distance footpaths in the United Kingdom. In 2004 the walk was named as the second-best walk in the world according to a survey of experts.[1] Harveys publish two dedicated strip maps at 1:40,000 scale. .

Route

Route of the Coast to Coast Walk

The more popular direction to take the walk is from east to west, which is the direction given in the original and most of the current guides, and which keeps the prevailing wind and rain at ones back, and the evening sun out of one's eyes. Some walkers do start from the east coast, either because they wish to have the Lake District as the climax of their walk or because they have already walked the route in the conventional direction.

Wainwright's route begins at St Bees in Cumberland, on the Irish Sea. It crosses Cumberland’s coastal plain and the Lake District, through Westmorland, and enters Yorkshire as it crosses the Pennines. It then crosses the Yorkshire Dales, the Vale of York and the North York Moors to reach the North Sea coast at Robin Hood's Bay.

Cumberland

The start at St Bees Seacote beach
  • At the small seaside town of St Bees, where there is a "C to C" monument by the lifeboat station. The walker should dip his feet in the sea before walking up the beach. The route from here follows the cliffs of St Bees Head north for a few miles before turning inland to pass through the villages of Sandwith, Moor Row and Cleator, on the West Cumberland Plain. It then climbs its first hill, (Dent), and follows its first valley (Nannycatch) before reaching Ennerdale Bridge.
  • The path goes up the valley of Ennerdale along the edge of Ennerdale Water and past the Black Sail Hut youth hostel. It climbs alongside Loft Beck to the fells north of Great Gable, passes the disused slate workings and mountain tramway of Honister, and descends to Rosthwaite in Borrowdale.
  • Leaving Borrowdale, the route passes Stonethwaite and follows the stream up to Greenup Edge, and down south-eastwards across into Westmorland and the craggy hills of Grasmere Common.

Westmorland

  • The path through Grasmere Common tracks along the Helm Crag ridge and from here down to Grasmere village.
  • From Grasmere the route climbs again to the pass of Grisedale Hause from where Wainwright offers a choice of three routes: either by way of the mountains of Helvellyn or St Sunday Crag, or an easier descent along Patterdale valley, the three options reuniting at Patterdale village.
  • From Patterdale, a stiff climb leads to Angle Tarn and Kidsty Pike, which at 2,560 feet is the highest point on the walk. There is then a steep drop to Haweswater from where the route follows the north shore of the lake before leaving the Lake District and visiting Shap Abbey and the village of Shap itself.
  • From Shap the route crosses the limestone pavement of the Westmorland limestone plateau to the village of Orton, and on to Kirkby Stephen, on the River Eden, which may for convenience be taken as the division between the Lake District fells and the Pennines.
  • The route climbs from Kirkby Stephen westward up the Pennines, by no famous fells, at length to the main west/east watershed of England, which marks the Yorkshire border on the ridge of Nine Standards Rigg

Yorkshire fells and dales

From Nine Standatrds Rigg, moorland trails and upland streams lead down into Swaledale. To help mitigate the effects of erosion, there are alternative routes at different times of the year. At almost exactly its halfway point, the Coast to Coast crosses the Pennine Way at Keld.

  • After Keld, there is a choice of a high (open and breezy) or low (riverside, with teashops and pubs) routes, both of which lead to Reeth.
  • In lower Swaledale, the route passes Marrick Priory, through wooded hillside to the market town of Richmond.

Vale of Mowbray and North York Moors

  • After Richmond, the route runs close to the River Wiske (but is more direct) across the flat farming land of the Vale of Mowbray to the village of Danby Wiske, and on to Ingleby Cross.
  • The route then climbs to the edge of the North York Moors to join the Cleveland Way as it rises and falls to Clay Bank Top.
  • The route continues on the Cleveland Way, crossing Urra Moor to Bloworth Crossing, where the Cleveland Way turns north and the Coast to Coast continues east on the trackbed of the dismantled Rosedale Railway to Blakey Ridge and the Lion Inn.
  • Next, the route continues across the moor before descending Glaisdale Rigg to the village of Glaisdale. From there, a woodland path leads to Egton Bridge where the route follows an old toll road to Grosmont.
  • After a climb out of Grosmont, the route crosses Sleights Moor before dropping into Littlebeck Wood (with a hermitage carved out of a single boulder, and the Falling Foss waterfall). From there the route passes through Low and High Hawsker to the cliff tops of the east coast, where it rejoins the Cleveland Way. The path then follows the coast to the south to the village of Robin Hood's Bay.

Places of interest

The following major headland is traversed by the route:

The following hills are crossed by the route:

Crossings

In 1991, the route was run in 39 hours 36 minutes and 52 seconds by Mike Hartley, setting a new record,[2] beating the previous record set in 1985 by Mike Cudahy who completed it in 46 hours 49 minutes.[3]

St Bees Head
Robin Hood's Bay

Outside links

References

  1. "Coast walk tops trek to Everest". BBC News. 23 November 2004. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/4034485.stm. Retrieved 19 October 2010. 
  2. "Coast to Coast record". http://www.coast2coast.co.uk/ubb/Forum1/HTML/001941.html. Retrieved 22 June 2007. 
  3. Cudahy, Mike (1989). Wild Trails to Far Horizons. London: Unwin Hyman. ISBN 9780044403814. 

Books

  • Cowley, Richard (2013). Retirement Blues Goodbye! - Along Wainwright's Coast to Coast Path. Triskelion House. ISBN 978-1-910006-01-6. 
  • Stedman, Henry (2006). Coast to Coast Path. Hindhead, Surrey, UK: Trailblazer Publications. ISBN 1-873756-92-5. 
  • Wainwright, Alfred (2003). A Coast to Coast Walk: A Pictorial Guide (Wainwright Pictorial Guides). London, UK.: Frances Lincoln. ISBN 0-7112-2236-3.