Day 1 Map
Path to Grindsbrook Clough in Foreground to the Right, Jacob's Ladder Route Runs Off Into the Distance, Grindslow Knoll in Between.
I took my
usual train to Edale at 10.45 from
There’s a long tunnel before you arrive in the Vale of Edale and you can never be sure of the weather you’ll be walking in until you come out the other end. It turned out a nice, fine, warm, ice cream eating sort of day again. I managed to ignore the two choc-ice selling cafes in the village, I was eager to be off, but not too eager to ignore the car park toilets though. I knew it was going to be too busy to have a quiet pee against a sheep until at least past the Downfall.
My first
attempt on the
A quarter of a mile from the village I stopped for a break. I know this was a little early but someone had put a brand new bench there and as I knew there wasn’t another until Torside, fifteen miles further on, I felt I ought to use it. I needed to sit down anyway, it was hot enough to take my legs off.
View from the Bench
Zip-off trousers are a wonderful invention. They are a real boon to every spindle legged British male walker desperate to feel a few warm rays on his legs the moment the sun pops its smiling face through the clouds. They are also great for the manufacturers who can charge an extra £20 for cutting the legs in half and joining them together again with a couple of 50 pence zips.
In doing the
The Vale of Edale was Heavily Wooded Before This Farmer Took Up Wood Carving
While you’re in the area, when you get to the top, instead of turning right at the first signpost you see you might like to carry straight on for the couple of hundred yards to Edale Cross. It’s no great shakes but it’s worth a quick look at and you don’t have to retrace your steps. There is a gate next to the cross and following the path by the side of the wall you can’t go wrong to the trig point on Kinder Low.
A pleasant cooling breeze made it an excellent day for walking and I had a song in my heart and Hendrix in my head as I skipped along in my scarpas towards the Downfall. There was nothing like the numbers about there were the other day but it was busy enough. I'd probably said hello to about ninety people I didn’t know by the end of the day.
It didn’t seem too long before I was trudging over the flagstones on Featherbed Moss. Once you’ve left the view of the rather majestic sweeping slopes of Kinder Scout behind this is a very boring couple of miles. I occupied myself by looking out for any bones which might have been raised to the surface by the dry weather. I would have thought there must have been a fair few ramblers in the 60s and 70s lost to the bog before they laid the flags. Looking at some of the quagmires the paving goes over, nasty pieces of work even in the dry, I wouldn’t like to imagine what it was like after heavy rain back then.
The Devil'sDike-Look Out for Satan Worshipping Lesbians
If you cross
the
Heights don’t
bother me much but I always feel a little uneasy on the highest part of this
path. I heard on some radio programme or other that there are two sorts of fear
of heights: the fear of falling and the fear of jumping. I definitely come down
on the side of jumpers. Walking by the side of a drop I will always get the
urge to jump. As I know I’m not going to I don’t have any fear. For some reason
along Torside Clough I can’t make up my mind between falling and jumping. It’s
a real worry what to do. I find it’s best to look at the boats (if they’re out)
on the reservoir and worry about breaking a leg during the very steep descent
at the end.
By the time I
reached the car park at Crowden it was 9 o’ clock, I couldn’t believe it had
taken me so long. I hadn’t made an effort to rush but apart from taking quite a
few photos I hadn’t dawdled either, or taken an hour off for lunch. At home at
a quarter to ten I was too tired to eat much but managed a shower so I wouldn’t
stick to the sheets and then that bed beckoned again.




