Day 10 Map
Morning Assembly at Richmond Grammar During the 60s was a
Shambolic Affair
In the morning I wandered into
I spent some time in the newsagents unfolding maps and
longer folding them back up again. From the looks flashed in my direction from
the girl behind the till I think she suspected I was trying to save on the
purchase price by memorizing them. The problem I had was that one of the
Explorer maps I wanted only had ten miles of the
Looking Back in the General Direction of Tan Hill Without a Trace of the A66
After a good Sunday lunch and relaxing in the garden with the shears and lawn mower I got a lift back to the A66. As well as leaving behind several maps I lightened the load by the weight of my jumper. My bag was noticeable lighter as soon as I took it out, though the effect was probably more psychological. The label reads thermalite and in spite of the misspeling doesn’t weigh much but the thought of lugging it round day after day in such heat did. I also left a couple of the encyclopedias behind.
I set off from the
It took me an hour and a half of very easy walking to
reach Baldersdale, a place I didn’t know existed until I was checking out the
route for this walk. My father would take us all over the northeast in the car
when I was a child but as there’s no pub we wouldn’t have explored this valley.
There wouldn’t have been anywhere for my brother and I to sit waiting in the
car for an hour with a packet of crisps. I didn’t see any sign at all of
Baldersdale
After Baldersdale there were some short but steep hills and I was back in fields which necessitated frequent consultation of the map so my pace slowed considerably. I carried a note pad on the trip which I scribbled in every evening and some mornings. A direct quote from this indicates perfectly my frame of mind on reaching this, the half-way point:
I keep thinking I’m going to make it, then I go up a short hill and with the weight (of the rucksack) and heat I have to stop a couple of times for breath and wonder how I’m going to get over Cross Fell. I thought I’d get fitter on the way but looking back on going up Jacob’s Ladder with hardly a stop I’m getting unfitter by the day.
It shows how important these sort of notes are to refresh your memory. I’d totally forgotten I’d written this and my recollection of then is much more upbeat than what I obviously felt at the time.
You're Looking for Signs to Point the Way and Three Show up at Once
An interesting little incident happened on my way down into Lunedale. Entering a large field, where the path spread and vanished from view a short distance from the stile there was a herd of cows, many with calves, in the middle, right where I guessed the path should be. When the cows saw me coming they didn’t just give the usual dirty looks they started mooing urgently to their calves and herding them into a tight group. Their actions were just like settlers in the wild west days forming their wagons into a circle against a band of hostile Indians. I know we’re supposed to call them Native Americans now but I feel that’s like calling Palestinians Native Israelis. Even without a dog I think it’s probably best not to get between a cow and its calf so decided against the confrontational approach of walking straight through them and skirted round instead.
I’d booked a room earlier at the
I didn’t need a full meal though I could have polished off a bag of chips quick enough had the nearby chip shop been open. Wandering round the town I found quite a large Co-Op which was still open so bought a couple of fizzy pops and some snacks. Since giving up the booze I’ve become quite addicted to fizzy drinks, particularly on those occasions when I would normally have had a pint or a few. It’s quite worrying really and I don’t like to tell people that know me.
I hadn’t bothered with the weather forecast over the
last few days. Watching the BBC weather crew pointing to the outline of the




