My laptop and I take a few day’s walk in the wild. Read more
  • Dan Bowen

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  • England England
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Backpacking, Camping, Digital nomad, Hiking, Nature, Train, Wilderness
  • 251kilometers traveled
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  • 12footprints
  • 3days
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  • Fenworthy forest

    May 29, 2023 in England ⋅ ☀️ 16 °C

    I joined a quiet country road as I headed north towards Soussons down, one of two wooded areas I aimed to cross today. It’s thankfully rare to see litter in Dartmoor, but along the stretch of road near the hamlet of Middle Cator, there was plenty. Most of the plastic flying around seemed to be from agriculture, probably wrapping fodder, but there were also sweet wrappers, a can and, fluttering from a fence post like a really gross pennant, used lavatory paper. It at least vindicated my having brought a rubbish bag and work glove for littler picking (although regrettably my picking claw stayed at home).

    On the bright side the narrow, fenced in lane let me get a closer look at some lambs - it’s lambing season, so these cute little bleaty clouds have been showing up all over. A pair of little lambs leapt lithely by, evidently as eager to leave as I was for them to linger. Then it was into the heavily forested Soussons down, which presented a soundscape of singing birds backed by the ethereal whisper of wind passing through the dense pines.

    The shady tracks of the forest were a welcome break from the sun, splashing through fords, and abrasion from plants and my clothes had created gaps in my sunscreen and a few patches had begun to burn the previous day. At the far edge of the common, the track began to climb and the trees thinned out leaving space for shaggy haired moorland cows were grazing. About half way up the slope to Bennett’s cross I took some time under a lone tree, that looked like it might be the last for a while; I finished the leftovers from dinner and breakfast to fuel me for more walking ahead.

    At Bennett’s cross I rejoin led the ‘two moors way’ for a spell, a route I had left back on Saturday, before heading into Fenworthy forest. Mostly it was a pleasant walk with bluebells and other wild flowers lining much of the lanes and tracks; in the upper part of the forest though the steep tracks had been torn up by heavy, tracked forestry equipment making the footing treacherous and leaving scratchy, entangling debris at frequent intervals. Although the cleared trees gave some good views over the lower part of the forest, the overall visual impression was of the bad guy’s handiwork in some on-the-nose environmentalist fiction, or the Ardennes forest circa Christmas 1944.
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  • Okehampton training area

    May 29, 2023 in England ⋅ ⛅ 17 °C

    Fenworthy forest opens out onto an expanse of high moorland, that only gets higher. I was surprised that the paths through the moor seemed relatively well defined - I had expected to need to switch from my open sided water-shoes to solid hiking shoes to protect against ticks in the long grass. First port of call was Sittaford tor, I came up the leeward slope but once I reached the 538meter peak, the wind was brisk, penetrating and threatened to carry off loose gear.

    Having covered about 20Km today, and being 20Km from the end of my walk, with most of the afternoon ahead I decided to see if I could push the pace. If I could get the last 20Km done in between 3.5 and 4.5 hours, I could make one of the last two train journeys of the day. Unladen that would be no problem, but with a hefty 15Kg on my back (still a few Kgs more than I really should be carrying on a hike, even after consuming a couple of days food and fuel) it would be a challenge. I had seen someone (presumably a marine) running with a substantial looking pack on a steep section of moor back on Saturday, but I imagine it’s something that you need to work up to (and that racks up a lot of mileage on the joints and hips).

    With no time to lose I pushed on and entered the MOD’s Okehampton training range at a 550meter peak named Quintin’s man. These high moors were a sharp contrast to the first part of the day. Whilst as beautiful and undulating as any other part of Dartmoor, the training area’s peaks and valleys were transposed about 150meters higher vs the morning’s walk. The moor is exposed, lacking any trees, the main sound is of wind, rushing over the ground and harping in the straps of my bag. Hardly any animals are around - the song birds of the morning replaced by birds of prey, floating silent and aloof on the winds; being a military range I saw few grazing animals, I like to think the few there are have escaped their farms and are hiding out up here - taking their chances with military firing.

    Heading north west I reached Whitehorse hill, then followed a peat pass to hanging stone hill - at 603 meters the high point of my trip (strictly in the literal sense). Going down hill sounds like it should be easier, but with loose stones underfoot and a heavy pack progressing down (at least without wrecking my knees) seemed almost as challenging as climbing up. Making careful use of walking poles I dipped down into my last deep valley, then walked along the shoulders of High Willhays and Westmill tor. The track drops slowly at first from a stone clad ‘pillbox’ bunker directly east of Yes tor, before diving more steeply down to the relatively flat area in front of Okehampton camp.

    I arrived at the Royal Marines’ Okehampton camp at 18:30, almost exactly three hours since I entered the range. I expected the camp to be fairly deserted at this time on a bank holiday Monday, but the Cornish Army Cadet Force were holding an event there; in a far corner of the camp a large group were being paraded, presumably for the end of event briefing. The Cornish Army Cadets wear the badge of The Rifles regiment; one building was festooned with Rifles banners - I couldn’t help wondering what the Marines would make of that if they saw it.

    With an hour in hand before the last train home I didn’t have push the pace on this last short, steep section from the camp down to the railway station. The trail plunges down through gorse bushes and the a small deciduous wood - the soundscape is the roar of the A30 one of the two major trunk roads into Cornwall. I found myself reflecting that noise pollution is something we become enured to as a society - not that long ago morning deliveries had to be made by silent electric floats or on foot to avoid breaking the taboo around morning noise, now it is accepted as inevitable.

    The wood ends at the national park boundary, and a short slalom of roads descend to the upper part of Okehampton. I arrived at Okehampton station with about half an our in hand before the last train. I pulled on a few items of clean clothing and switched my dusty open sided water shoes for walking shoes and socks. I set my pack down on a bench and then looked around as far as my sore and stiffening limbs would allow.

    The station is like a time capsule, presented in the liveries of the South Western railway; it is much as it would have looked 100 years ago, complete with 1920s art deco posters advertising destination stations that closed over 50 years ago. It owes this preservation to a charitable organisation that ran a museum here for the many years Okehampton was closed for regular rail services, which only recently resumed. National rail trains arrive and depart from Platform 3; platforms 1 and 2 house the station museum and are set up as if to run a separate heritage railway down the remaining stretch of line (though as far as I can tell none actually runs).

    All that remained was a few hour’s rail journey back home. I binned the litter I had picked up on the moor at Exeter St David’s station, where I connected to a train directly home. I watched the sunset from the train window, before hobbling the last few kilometres home from the station.
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