United Kingdom
Gretna Green

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  • Day 3

    A journey of delays. Tomorrow we start

    September 10, 2024 in England ⋅ 🌬 12 °C

    Well we have finally made it to the start line after a rather tricky journey over.
    Started with Gisborne but didn't matter as we overnighted with Phil and Kate.
    Then a stressful ride to airport in an unreliable VW only making it to the airport with 4 hours to spare. Talk about cutting it fine.
    2 hours late leaving Auckland which gave us 30 minutes to change terminals in Singapore and board. Fortunately this flight also left late due to them waiting for an engineer to strap a cello to a seat.
    Some trepidation at Heathrow wondering if our bags made it so quite a relief to see them.
    Train to Carlisle for 2 nights to recuperate. Unfortunately Maree not feeling great but hopefully improving.
    Train to St Bees for a start tomorrow. Collected our stones which we carry from Irish sea to North Sea.
    St Bees very pretty. Just hope the weather holds. 22km tomorrow with a camp in pub garden.
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  • Day 2

    Von Canterbury nach Gretna

    July 19, 2024 in Scotland ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

    Als ich heute morgen mit Andreas den Frühstücksraum der Oakside Lodge betrat, saß dort schon das Double von Queen Elizabeth. Bei Tageslicht betrachtet war die Dame doch wesentllich jünger als von mir angenommen, was die Anwesenheit von drei Teenies am Frühstückstisch bestätigte.
    Nach einem "full English breakfast" starteten wir zuversichtich in einen herrlichen Sommertag. Uns war klar, dass die Fahrt bis an die schottische Grenze lang werden würde, aber dass wir uns buchstäblich durch den Verkehr wühlen mussten, hatten wir nicht erwartet. Zum Glück fuhren wir mit weit geöffnetem Fenster und hinten hochgerollter Plane, sodass wir vom herrlichen Wetter etwas mitbekamen. Der Blick auf die kahlen Berge der Yorkshire Dales im Abendlicht, auf denen wie weiße Punkte Schafe weideten, entschädigte für die lange Fahrt.
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  • Day 25

    Second walking day - no rain!

    September 23, 2019 in England ⋅ ⛅ 17 °C

    Just relaxing and washing before dinner. Had a great Indian meal last night, and we plan to get back there tonight as from now on probably less choice in very small villages. We did our walk today, and have finally officially walked to Carlisle!! We were taxied back to Burgh by Sands to begin, and started later - about 11.15 - as the prediction was for better weather later in the morning and into the afternoon. As always the predictions were a little off, and the morning was fine, but so also is the afternoon, and at 4.30 it is still even sunny, so we had a good 13 km walk.

    It was basically flat, though we did go up and down the river banks now and then, and there was a lot of walking through mud and boggy ground, and through fields avoiding the bogs and cow pads, so it was quite hard work some of the time. We are following the Hadrian’s Wall pathway signs which are black and white rather discreet acorns, not nearly as obvious as our Camino yellow arrows and scallop shells, or the red and white signs in France. We are training our brains and eyes to notice them...one mistake today took us down a particularly boggy path till we finally reached a field with a chained and padlocked gate and had to turn back. So we are getting vigilant!

    But it was beautiful scenery, cows and fields and along the river into Carlisle. Tomorrow we finally leave this small city (small enough that we feel we now know it quite intimately!) and head off into smaller towns and villages for the next 6 days of walking, then we have 2 days walking through Newcastle upon Tyne where we finish.

    This morning I did a really risky thing - I bought new walking shoes!! Amr suggested it, and it did seem the only solution to my rain sodden shoes, which were still wet this morning, and which were obviously no longer waterproof and would be wet the whole 10 days. I last used them in 2014 on the Coast to Coast and I think they have sat disintegrating in my cupboard since then. So I have to report that the risk paid off - got some great shoes on sale - £80 reduced to £40 - and I wore them all day and they were so comfortable and coped with the mud and puddles...phew...they are now truly worn in and no longer look pristine! Tomorrow and for the rest of our walking days rain is predicted...we know that this won’t necessarily mean that we walk in rain, but I am happy to have proper shoes that have a chance of keeping my feet dry.

    Tomorrow is a 17 km walk (which probably means a bit longer), and I hope Carole and John won’t find it too long. They kayak and cycle but aren’t as intrepid walkers as we are. But today and yesterday were a good mild introduction to longer walks I hope.
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  • Day 24

    First walking day in the rain

    September 22, 2019 in England ⋅ 🌧 13 °C

    First, last night’s dinner at the pub was good. I had a steak and managed to avoid too much stooge! They offered Carole chips or jacket potato with her lasagne!! Like they do in Ireland, everything comes with potatoes in some form. (She said neither please, just salad!).

    And this morning we had a good breakfast, continental and full English choices, and a good start before walking. Despite going to bed with still a perfect day, by this morning it was raining as predicted and we set off in our rain gear at about 9.30. It wasn’t heavy all the time, and sometimes almost stopped, but enough to get pretty soggy, and the ground, even though it hadn’t rained for a week, immediately got very muddy and puddly. With the consistent rain I found that my poncho wasn’t as impermeable as I thought. We’ve always been so lucky with weather on our Caminos that it may not have been put to the test and my t-shirt got quite wet which was uncomfortable and cold. It is much colder today, and hard to remember that yesterday we only wore a light shirt, and many people just had shorts and short sleeves. Any way it was all part of the fun, and it was a short flat walk today, along the firth and half way towards Carlisle. We did about 15 kms, and walked to Burgh by Sands (pronounced bruff). It is a tiny town, but famous for a statue of Edward I where they fought Robert the Bruce...Edward died here, but now buried at Westminster Abbey. Also there is a very old church, St Michael’s, built partly with stones from Hadrian’s Wall, dating back to 13th century, with some later additions (or maybe the later additions were 12th C!!). And it had been a garrison during the wars. So much history!

    But as the inn at Burgh by Sands is closed at the moment, we were taxied back to Carlisle for the night (all part of the service) and tomorrow we get taken back to Burgh by Sands to walk back to Carlisle! So it means that we are 2 nights and this very pleasant B and B, and don’t have to pack up tomorrow morning, and have 2 days to get washing dry! So we are getting to know Carlisle well, and are going out to Indian tonight. Paul our taxi driver recommended one that is the “best in Carlisle” so we’ll put it to the test. Indian food in the UK is very good, better than I’ve found in Australia. But the other Asian cuisines - Thai, Malay etc are not anything like as good as in Oz.

    Tomorrow’s walk is even shorter than today - about 12 kms I think, and still flat. The hilly more demanding part comes in the middle, so this is a lovely gentle start!
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  • Day 23

    Now at the Walk's StartingPoint

    September 21, 2019 in England ⋅ ☀️ 22 °C

    We spent a few hours this morning in Carlisle looking around. A beautiful cathedral - 12th century- and a castle. And another cloudless day! At midday we assembled at the hotel and took a taxi to here - Bowness on Solway. Solway is the firth of Solway, the other side is Scotland. At low tide, which it is this afternoon, there is just a small amount of visible water, but fills up when the tide comes in. Such a delightful very small town, and we are staying at an extremely charming B and B, which was the old rectory of the nearby church and just round the corner from the only pub, the King’s Arms where we are having dinner.

    We couldn’t check into our rooms till 4 o’clock so we walked round the town, checking the starting point of the walk and enjoying the ambience and scenery. Quite a lot of walkers round, many who went the other direction from us, walked east to west, and have just finished! They say it was lovely, and of course they have had superb weather. I have already unpacked my poncho to have ready in my backpack! But meanwhile all is just wonderful.
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  • Day 6

    Gretna Green

    April 13, 2024 in Scotland ⋅ 🌬 12 °C

    After an all-hands-on-deck tidy-up (and some troublesome pops down the toilet) we headed for home through mist, sun, rain, sun, rainbow, hail sun and sleet. We stopped.for sandwich in Gretna Green and headed off for a pizza in Perth for Steven McCreadie's birthday party.Read more

  • Day 17

    Wir erreichen Scottland

    September 13, 2023 in England ⋅ ☁️ 14 °C

    Bei schönstem Wetter inmitten der Berge geniessen wir morgens früh (9 Uhr) bei frischen 10 Grad die herrliche Aussicht.
    Danach fahren wir durch den Lake-District, erfreuen uns an der Aussicht.
    Kurz nach Carlisle werden wir mit einem grossen Schottlandbanner in Schottland willkommen geheissen. So, jetzt sind wir nach genau 7 Jahren wieder in Schottland angelangt.Read more

  • Day 19

    Bye bye Schottland

    June 17, 2023 in England ⋅ ☁️ 21 °C

    4.45 Uhr Tagwache und dann ca. 260 Meilen bis nach Glasgow gefahren, dort unseren BMW abgegeben und mit dem Zug nach Carlisle gefahren. Heute Abend keine Chance ein vernünftiges Restaurant zu finden und zuletzt im Nandoo's gelandet, wo der Wein in Cans daher kommt😡.Read more

  • Day 10

    8. Tag Hadrians Walk

    June 8, 2023 in England ⋅ ⛅ 18 °C

    Die letzte Etappe Carlisle nach Bowness on Solway war zugleich die längste Etappe und endete bei schönstem Wetter nach gut 40'000 Schritten oder knapp 30km.
    Unsere Eindrücke vom Hadrians Wall Path sind eher durchzogen. Die mittleren drei Etappen waren landschaftlich sehr schön, die ersten und die letzten zwei Etappen führten über lange Strecken über Teerstrassen oder zwischen heckengesäumte Wege durch.
    Zum guten Glück hatten wir das sonnige Wetter auf unserer Seite.
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  • Day 27

    Carlisle, UK

    January 3, 2020 in England ⋅ ⛅ 45 °F

    Train from Morpeth west to Carlisle. This area is generally the northern border of Britain and Scotland. The Romans built a wall across this part of the country to keep the Barbarians (The Scots) from moving south. The wall is called Hadrians wall. Parts of it still exist. This photo though is Carlisle Cathedral. A beautiful example of construction that has stood 800+ years. Hadrians Wall and history tomorrow.Read more

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