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THE PENNINE
WAY Start - Edale, England
2 7
1
M
I L E S Finish -
Kirk Yetholm, Scotland
A nice
steady day to prepare for tomorrow's marathon, although the day felt a little
slow due to the lack of interesting sights. We left at 9 in the morning and did
the 15 easy miles by 3.45 P.M. Before we entered the forest, which is the main
highlight of the day, the walking was on moor land, with the occasional crossing
of a minor road. This kind of moor land is easy as there is a well marked out
path, but it is still easy to get lost due to there being lots of footpaths
criss-crossing the main path. There is also a lot stiles to climb over, and at
one of them I nearly lost my water bottle on a stile pole and had to run back
the 1.5 miles to where I lost the bottle, after I reached for the bottle and
suddenly realised it was not there. After the moor land, there followed a
stretch of 6 miles of forest during which we came to 2 places with amazingly
long strange names. Don't ask what the best way to pronounce is as I don't know.
Blakehopebunhaugh and Cottonshopeburnfoot are the two names, which turned out to
be areas around forest ranger huts. After walking though these areas we strolled
in to Bryness.
From Bellingham the Pennine way
slopes up gently over light moor land conditions, as it heads towards Hareshaw
House, a large country house, which is the only major landmark for today. After
Hareshaw House the Pennine way leads you gently down to a minor road. After
crossing the road you start the day's first and last climb. Half way up the hill
you come to a very minor and practically unnoticeable summit Lough Shaw, Deer
Play is the main summit to which you are climbing to, which happens to be an apt
name for the hill as, if you are lucky you will see some deer in the area. From
there you come to a succession of small and also unnoticeable hills that could
quite easily be missed or tossed of as small hills or even the natural incline
of the land. Those hills are Whitley Pike, Padon Hill and Brownrigg head.
After Brownrigg Head you
enter into the Redesdale forest that you will be
following all the way into Bryness. The forest areas and the small huts have
some really strange names of Blakehopeburnhaugh and
Cottonshopeburnfoot. These two areas are the last
things that are of any notice for rest of the day, apart from the river that
you pick up at Blakehopeburnhaugh
The bridge to cross the
river is 50 metres from the A68 which directly opposite from the footpath
entrance has a sign on one side. This sign proudly reminds you that Kirk
Yetholm is the next town you will come to and that is in Scotland, further up
North. Also just slightly further up the road there is a pub who claim to fame
is that it is the last pub before Kirk Yetholm in Scotland. Yes with these
reminders you quickly realise that only one or 2 days is all that remains
between you and the finish.