After a night in Cockermouth, I
made an early start for Peter House Farm, heading east into the rising
sun. It was a perfect morning and the
hills looked astonishing as I pulled off the main road and headed up the narrow
lanes, thinking I wouldn’t like to meet anyone coming the other way (I did on
my return later in the day, and it was awful squeezing past them). It was all quiet and I was the first person
to park up in the small layby. There’s
always an eagerness to get going when the day is so good and the land is quiet,
I want to have it all to myself.
A tarmac lane led across the fields
full of Herdwicks. Another bloke was
walking his dog in the opposite direction to me. ‘Beautiful day,’ he said. ‘Aye,’ I replied, ‘Grand.’ A performative northern-ness emerges from me
in these encounters, I suppose because I’m trying to assert my rightness to be
there, my birth-right possession of the north.
It’s a kind of defensiveness too, a plea to be allowed to walk there.
There was a van parked at the end
of the tarmac but no one around. Just
after here I turned off the main track to Skiddaw House and looked for the path
up the fellside between Dead Crags and Dead Beck. It was an official route but looked
horrendously steep. I had chosen it
because I had wanted to avoid the horrendous steepness of Birkett Edge and the
option of switching routes hovered in my mind.
This was a more direct way though, so I stuck with it. At first I failed to find any real path and
slowly stepped up the grass tussocks almost like climbing a ladder. It was very hard going but for a while I
didn’t feel too bad. Eventually though
my calves started stinging with lactic acid and I started to feel weary,
zig-zagging left and right to try and ease the gradient. Something like a path finally appeared, though
it was still as steep, and bit by bit it led me to the top of Bakestall. The compensation for all this effort was the
view, especially to the low-lying country north and west. The hills of Galloway were perfectly visible,
not just the usual sight of Criffel, but something snowy-topped even further
north.
The blue sky continued to glow
overhead as I trudged up the slopes towards Skiddaw. The wire fence that took a sharp turn after
climbing Birkett Edge was coated in places with rime ice. Under the glare of the sun, short sections of
ice from each individual section of wire had fallen onto the ground, like
tumbled icicles or a fancy dessert.
There was still no one around until
I approached the summit of Skiddaw, and then the hordes appeared. Just before I reached the trig point,
typically, some woman sat herself down on the base to laze around and hog it to
herself. I contented myself with the topographic
pillar and gazed out at the western fells.
Each peak was picked out in perfect clarity, the still-brown slopes
folded into the distance. It would have
taken an age to name each one but I let my eye rest on a few and let the
memories of the times I had climbed them fill my mind. There was a slight breeze, making it feel
quite chilly, so I stopped behind one of the shelters to eat an apple and to
contemplate the view. I was joined by
some noisy southerners who were looking for a geocache, so I packed my bag and
moved on.
It was so glorious and, after the
assault on Dead End (as I shall name the ascent), I had recovered my energy, so
I added a quick out-and-back visit to Skiddaw Little Man. Again, the reward for this was a superb view,
passing even that of Skiddaw itself. A curl
of smoke rose from a field near Applethwaite, Derwent Water glowed a sublime
blue, and the hills marched onwards before me.
It was worth the detour.
The drop off towards Sale How was
rather boggy, particularly in the col and then nearer the bottom. A few folk were ascending there as I walked
towards Skiddaw House. Ravens were
calling from the faded larches around the building and there were some blokes
climbing onto the roof, presumably doing repairs rather than anything
nefarious, as I sat down for a bite to eat in a warmer spot. Skylarks had been singing over the grasslands
on my way down, with mighty Skiddaw looming behind, and a brown bird hopped
about in front of me, though I couldn’t tell if it was skylark or meadow pipit
or something else.
The first part of my long walk out
was over boggy terrain to the foot of Knott.
Here I turned left down a narrow, craggy, and very beautiful little
valley – Hause Beck, AW identifies it as – which led to pastureland lower
down. The path curved around the
fellsides in utter tranquillity and I felt I could walk here forever, gentle
scenery all around, my legs working perfectly, the sun shining.
Across the road at Orthwaite, I
followed the badly signposted Cumbria Way through fields of ewes and lambs, the
first I had seen except from a moving vehicle, until I came to Park Wood. A lot of the trees had been cleared,
presumably because they are non-native spruce, and the forestry road I used
passed through scenes of desolation and abandonment before dipping down towards
the village of Bassenthwaite. Just on
the edge of the village was a little stand of trees with a profusion of
celandines underneath them and also some primroses tucked under some banking.
After a refreshing pint or two in
the Sun Inn, I finished my walk through more fields full of lambs. It was surprising to find them so quiet as
they usually kick up quite a racket.
Some of them looked very new indeed, not entirely confident in their ability
to stand upright. Some were a little
lost, looking for their real mother. I
tried to keep my distance, not to disturb them, even if it was hard to keep
moving in the sodden, clay-rich ground.
As I approached my car, I looked up
again to the slopes of Skiddaw, still looking marvellous. I felt that I could do the whole round again,
just to be part of those beautiful hills for as long as possible. If only my legs would have carried me that
far.
An entertaining read, and a great looking route - except for 'Dead End', that is!
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