THE WAINWRIGHT SOCIETY MAGAZINE
Transcription
THE WAINWRIGHT SOCIETY MAGAZINE
Issue 38 - Summer 2012 T H E WA I N W R I G H T S O C I E T Y M A G A Z I N E Two Visits to the Bishop Wainwright on the Web After the 214 Society Walk: Reston Scar What I love about the Lakes – Hunter Davies A Dutch Passion for the Lakes Fundraising News The Wainwright Society 10th Anniversary Party and much much more ... THE SOCIETY FOR LOVERS OF THE LAKE DISTRICT AND FELLWALKING. www.wainwright.org.uk RemembeR, WainWRight Society membeRS get 20% off WainWRight titleS at fRanceS lincoln! the coaSt to coaSt Walk by keren frenkel beSt WalkS on exmooR by Richard Webber £12.99 £16.99 isbn isbn 9780711232877 9780711232174 Walking With the bRontËS in WeSt yoRkShiRe beSt day WalkS in SnoWdonia by John gillham by norman and June buckley Note from the Editorial Team This Summer issue includes a mix of regular features and one-off articles, provided by established and new contributors, which is very pleasing. Coincidentally, there are two articles with a similar theme – what to tackle after completing the Wainwrights. Martin Roberts writes about visiting the summits covered by AW’s Outlying Fells of Lakeland and the Birketts – and here is a further link with Jenny Whalley’s ‘Favourite Walk’ article, which describes her completion, on Pike de Bield, of the Birketts, with differing views of Pillar Rock – while Bill Honeywell describes how he cycled round the British coastline last year for charity. Whilst many members live in the north of England, others live far afield. One, Riekie Tonk from Holland but currently living and working in Germany, has written an article describing her passion for all things British and the Lake District in particular. Nearer to home, but away from the Lakes, Chris Grogan tells us about a relatively new long-distance walk through the Yorkshire Dales and Howgill Fells that members might like to undertake. By the time you receive this, the Society’s 6050-40 Challenge will be over. Our hope is that participants will have experienced fine weather (in contrast with last year’s Challenge and, this year, the wettest April and early May on record) and that there will have been a return to the excellent conditions of late March, enabling us all to enjoy the outdoors to the full this summer. We hope you enjoy reading this issue of Footsteps, from the wide-ranging articles to the regular features and will perhaps take part in the prize quiz mentioned on page 27. As ever, we will welcome any comments or suggestions about Footsteps you may wish to make. David Johnson and John Burland (Editorial) Andrew Stainthorpe (Graphic Design) SOCIETY CONTACTS • SOCIETY SECRETARY Peter Linney, 3 Beech Close, Farnham, Knaresborough, North Yorkshire HG5 9JJ Tel: 01423 340481 Email: [email protected] • MEMBERSHIP SECRETARY Jenny Whalley, The Wainwright Society, Kendal Museum, Station Road, Kendal, Cumbria LA9 6BT Email: [email protected] • PRESS & PUBLICITY £8.99 isbn 9780711232549 Derek Cockell – Tel: 01502 731940 Email: [email protected] Issue 38 - Summer 2012 £12.99 isbn 9780711232532 Front Cover photograph: Wastwater, looking towards Yewbarrow and Great Gable by Val Corbett AZINE HT SOCIETY MAG T H E WA I N W R I G To take advantage of your discount, please visit our website www.franceslincoln.com and, where prompted, enter the promotional code WAINSOC (case sensitive) • WALKS AND EVENTS Caroline Nichol – Tel: 01253 738721 Email: [email protected] Two Visits to the Bishop Wainwright on the Web After the 214 Society Walk: Reston Scar What I love about the Lakes – Hunter Davies • FOOTSTEPS EDITORIAL TEAM A Dutch Passion for the Lakes Fundraising News The Wainwright Society 10th Anniversary Party and much much more ... OF THE THE SOCIETY FOR LOVERS FELLWALKING. LAKE DISTRICT AND Footsteps 2012a ad.indd 1 9/2/12 16:27:24 Email: [email protected] www.wainwrigh t.org.uk 3 A Dales High Way Chairman’s Notes When walkers think of Wainwright, they naturally think of the Lakeland fells and his Pictorial Guides. However, two other books have long provided a source of delight and inspiration. They are Walks in Limestone Country and Walks on the Howgill Fells, first published in 1970 and 1972, respectively, by Westmorland Gazette. So, Wainwright’s on Twitter and Facebook. Do I hear the sound of purists ceremonially ripping off their Wainwright Society badges and tearing up their membership cards? I hope not. A Dales High Way is a linear 90-mile long-distance trail from Saltaire to Appleby-in-Westmorland, and includes crossing the high country of the Yorkshire Dales. The route, which takes between 5 and 9 days to walk, was devised three years ago and is becoming increasingly popular with walkers looking to explore this most glorious and diverse landscape. AW himself said of the western Dales: ‘This is a region unique, without a counterpart, but its charms are shyly hidden. Those who seek and find them are often enslaved.’ There is no better way to seek and find than on a multi-day walk when time can be taken to truly appreciate the surroundings. The route of A Dales High Way leaves the Victorian model village of Saltaire and for the next 28 miles or so crosses the great expanse of Rombalds and Skipton Moors before heading into Malhamdale and limestone country. AW describes this landscape as ‘a wonderland created by its rocks’, and indeed it is. The walking is delightful on the well-drained springy turf that covers the porous sediment. Malham and its environs are understandably popular but the walker soon leaves the crowds behind to pass Attermire Scar where Mesolithic people sought sanctuary in caves in the rock face over 8,000 years ago. After Settle, the way continues into one of the area’s hidden delights, Crummack Dale. This lovely secluded valley opens up into a dramatic landscape of broad limestone terraces where the bare rocks tell the geological history of the dale. As Wainwright observed: ‘There is never a dull moment in and around Crummack Dale for walkers with observant eyes and enquiring minds.’ A climb over Ingleborough leads to a vertiginous descent into Chapel-le-Dale before the route takes in Whernside and the beautiful valley of Dentdale. 4 The Society committee had a lively debate about the issue and we rehearsed all available stereotypical responses from ‘what would he have made of X box?’ (In case anyone is skipreading and for avoidance of doubt – no, we’re not considering an Alfred Wainwright X Box game.) Chris and Jess, at Attermire Scar Leaving Dent, the trail continues over Frostrow Fell where the first full view of the Howgill Fells is revealed. These soft, rounded hills, famously referred to by AW as ‘squatting elephants’, offer solitude and isolation rarely experienced by the walker in the Lake District or the Dales. The fells are open, with no walls to follow or stiles to climb, and the Dales High Way crosses them in a single breathtaking ridge walk. The Howgills are the habitat of fell ponies that roam in semi-wild family groups on the open hillside and they may well be your only companions. Finally, A Dales High Way heads into the Eden valley where one last surprise awaits. The biggest limestone area in the country outside the Ingleborough district is crossed at Great Asby Scar, from where AW’s beloved Lakeland fells can be seen in all their glory. Walkers can complete their adventure by taking the train south from Appleby on the fabulous Settle to Carlisle line. Further information on A Dales High Way can be found at www.daleshighway.org.uk. But strange images are hard to avoid. AW magisterially harrumphing in some benighted corner of cyberspace. There he stands on a lofty electronic eminence, cap pulled down as a squall of megabits swirls about him. And then there are the questions. Would he be allowed to smoke in Facebookland? Would anyone there know what a nun is, let alone three of them? Would Wainwright think that Google was a spelling mistake? Are practical jokes allowed in Silicon Valley? When people talk of RAM, do they mean Herdwick or North Country Cheviot? I must ask the founder of Facebook when he’s stopped counting his squillions. In the meantime, let’s use the social networking phenomenon to reach out to a new generation of people who can find joy and health in the hills just so long as they know that they’re only a Pictorial Guide away. We can use cyberspace to release some of these people from the bondage of cyberspace, and isn’t that a neat trick? Come to think of it a Wainwright X Box game might not be such a bad idea after all. Imagine it. In a majestic mountain landscape, we’re battling the elements and evil forces such as noisy school parties and walkers in luminous lycra to discover the meaning of life – 214. OK, I may struggle to get that one past the committee. Just yet. Eric Robson Chairman Chris Grogan – Saltaire Member No. 1722 5 Two Visits to the Bishop Wainwright on the Web Taking full advantage of the summerlike weather in the week preceding the Society’s AGM, Janet and I went looking for some of the locations of the drawings in A Lakeland Sketchbook, in order to participate in the Society’s Lakeland Sketchbook Project. THE WAINWRIGHT SOCIETY ON FACEBOOK AND TWITTER yards I confess to using what AW described as the fellwalker’s next-best asset (after ‘a pair of strong legs’) ... ‘a tough and rubbery bottom’. The Project is to compile a contemporary record of the scenes shown in the 400 drawings in AW’s five sketchbooks, using members’ photographs taken from the exact places where AW stood to take those photographs he used as a base for his drawings. Details of the project and how to take part are set out on the Society’s website. The Bishop of Barf – March 2012 Pleased to be back at the car in one piece and the photograph safely taken, I reached into my map case for the sketchbook – but it wasn’t there. I realised I had left it beside the Bishop! With a wry smile, I set off again to the Bishop, retrieved the sketchbook but not before its cover had started to curl in the heat. Two visits to the Bishop in half an hour must be some sort of record! My photograph and AW’s sketch are shown here. Barf AW’s Sketch – The Bishop of One location I decided to visit was the Bishop of Barf, described by AW as ‘a venerable figure whose spotless vestments result from regular applications of whitewash’. In reality, the Bishop is a peculiar ‘upstanding pinnacle’ perched a few hundred feet up the south-east flank of Barf and requiring a ‘stiff climb ... up shifting scree’. Janet wisely chose to stay in the car, near to Beckstones at the foot of Barf, while I toiled up the slope in the midday heat. Ten minutes of concerted effort later I was beside the Bishop and, sketchbook in hand, soon located what I judged to be the exact position for AW’s sketch. Perched precariously on a very steep slope, I put down the sketchbook and, after taking the required photograph, headed back to the car. The descent was more difficult than the ascent and for a few 6 Over three days, we looked for a dozen or so of the sketch locations. Some were easy to find and reach, such as Matterdale Church which we had driven past many times but never visited. It was an idyllic scene, the churchyard full of daffodils and bathed in sunshine. Other locations are rather trickier to find, where leaving paths on the fellside is necessary in order to pinpoint exact locations – as we discovered when searching for the viewpoint for Bowfell from Lingmoor. It was interesting to compare AW’s sketches with the scenes today, for example noting where trees have grown or been removed or where AW may have used ‘artistic licence’. We really enjoyed visiting the sketch locations and would recommend others doing so. With eighty locations to choose from this year, there is a range of options from searches involving fellwalking to strolls from a car. David Johnson – Histon, Cambridge Member No. 481 I think I would be on fairly safe ground by suggesting that AW would have regarded social networking with the same horror that he felt when meeting large walking parties out on the fells. ‘The worst experience that befalls a solitary walker is coming face to face with a large party, especially when they are strung out along his path. In a tight place, where this many-headed and many-legged caterpillar cannot be bypassed, it must be confronted. It may be a party of 36. Every one of them ventures a greeting of sorts … If I am in sociable mood I mumble a response to the first. The rest must share it. I am not going to say good-afternoon 36 times in quick succession. The tail-end think me a surly beggar. Okay, so I do not like large parties on the hills.’ (Fellwanderer) The acid test of success will be attracting new members to the Society. Already, we can claim a modest success, having signed up our first member via Facebook in the first two weeks. Find us on Facebook at: http://www.facebook. com/thewainwrightsociety and on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/wainsoc THE SOCIETY FORUM NEWS • A New Members board has been set up where people joining the Forum can introduce themselves. • The ‘Light the Wainwrights’ Challenge (see pages 28-29) was an example of how the Forum can bring Society members together to raise funds for a good cause. That the Society might extend its presence on the Web has been under discussion for some time and, following a member’s suggestion, the Committee agreed to set up a Facebook page and a corresponding Twitter account. For the uninitiated, Facebook and Twitter are a means of communicating with your friends and a way of advertising your presence to a new audience. There has been discussion about ways that we might introduce the rising generation to Wainwright and the joys of walking in the hills, and Facebook and Twitter present the Society with an excellent way of communicating this message to a younger audience. Members with Facebook and Twitter accounts can help spread the message by ‘liking’ us on Facebook and ‘following’ us on Twitter. If you are on Facebook, you can share our updates on your profile page to advertise the Society to your friends. On your Twitter account, you can ‘retweet’ our ‘tweets’ to your followers, which will all help to spread the message. And, yes, I do realise that the above paragraph will be gobbledegook to many of you! • Forum members have also arranged get-togethers and walks during the period of the Society’s 60-50-40 Challenge. If you would like to meet other Society members, the Forum is a good place to begin. Registration is simple and you can start posting immediately. Go to: http://wainwright. proboards.com/index.cgi or follow the link from the Society website at: www.wainwright.org.uk Derek Cockell Press & Publicity Officer 7 After the 214 Many Wainwright followers have achieved, or are progressing towards, a complete round of the 214 fells described by AW in his seven Pictorial Guides. But after celebrating their achievement on the final summit, what are lovers of the Lakeland fells to do next? Many go on to do them all again, and again, using different routes of ascent. I have heard of one couple of Society members with forty-five completed rounds between them! There are, however, many more than 214 summits in Lakeland and this article looks at the means of discovering these. After completing the seven Guides, Wainwright did of course produce a further volume, entitled The Outlying Fells of Lakeland. It was not his plan to do this when he commenced his seven-volume epic, and it can be argued that some of the outliers justified inclusion in the original Guides. Certainly, there are some wonderful hills included in this later volume, and it is a pity that relatively few people attempt the Outlying Fells, and therefore miss out on some excellent hillwalking in less familiar areas. Maybe AW ought not to have written it ‘primarily for old age pensioners and others who can no longer climb high fells’, as he stated on the title page. • Finally, the chapter entitled Stickle Pike describes my favourite Outlying Fell. AW describes it as ‘a budding Matterhorn’ and it really has everything. It has the classic mountain shape, a craggy top, a great name, and its very own tarn. It can be climbed most easily from Kiln Bank Cross at the summit of the minor road between Broughton Mills and the Duddon Valley. Instead of joining the crowds on the tourist path up Coniston Old Man, for the umpteenth time, why not detour a few miles and enjoy Stickle Pike, and then extend your walk with a wander over the Dunnerdale Fells to Great Stickle? Wainwright was, of course, not the only one to write about the Lake District peaks, and perhaps the best attempt at covering the entire National Park was made by Bill Birkett with his Complete Lakeland Fells. This was published in 1994, but is still available, and I would recommend it to anyone who doesn’t already possess a copy. The book was published in hardback ‘coffee table’ format, but there is also a pocket-sized version to fit in your rucksack. By way of example, I select three chapters from the book which might whet one’s appetite: • First, Black Combe, to which AW devotes sixteen pages, must be visited. It is a big hill; at 1,970 ft, it is higher than 85 of the original 214, and the ascent effort is greater since the start is from near to sea level. The summit of Black Combe is renowned as a viewpoint, although on the day I climbed it, the rain poured and my views were limited to twenty yards – a re-visit in better weather is overdue. • Secondly, the chapter devoted to Caw describes a short walk over Caw, Pikes and Green Pikes. Caw is an excellent fell, a smaller version of the easily recognised Harter Fell, just three miles to its north. Being so close to the Coniston Fells, I wish AW could have found room for Caw in Book 4. 8 ng and the Scafells Throstlehow Crag to Scar Lathi The author set out to detail all of the Lakeland summits over 1,000 feet, and came up with a total of 541 (now known as ‘Birketts’), which he has expertly organised into 120 walks of varying lengths. Each walk is described in detail with route plans, and the book is written in a very readable style, profusely illustrated with the author’s own photographs. As with most efforts of this scale, there are errors, with a number of prominent tops omitted (such as Stickle Pike from Tarn Hill, with Harter Fell left and Caw right Symonds Knott and High Spying How); however, it would be churlish to dwell on these as the book overall makes a decent attempt to bring together all of the Lakeland summits in one volume. The number of 541 summits sounds a lot, especially to someone who has striven for years to complete the 214 Wainwrights. However, that figure includes all but two of AW’s summits (Castle Crag, which doesn’t reach 1,000 feet, and Mungrisdale Common). So any Wainwright ‘completer’ tackling the Birketts is already well on the way. In addition, many of the Birkett tops are visited when walking AW’s routes to the summits in the Pictorial Guides, or require only a short detour. Being something of a peak-bagger, I started collecting Birketts as I commenced my second round of the 214, working them into my routes. I was soon smitten, and my regular walking companions got quite used to my taking off at a tangent between Wainwright tops, to add another craggy outcrop to my collection. It has to be admitted that many of the Birketts are less than impressive, being no more than high points on a ridge, a good example of this being the north, middle and south tops of Skiddaw, in addition to the established summit of High Man. beaten track to unfamiliar summits and areas which would not be visited otherwise. There is also a sting in the tail, as one of Birkett’s summits is Pillar Rock which is a rock climb and rather unfair to regular fellwalkers. Whilst I am no climber, I was fortunate in having an experienced rock climber to guide me, and so was able to finish the Birketts in some style. My favourite Birkett walks? There are too many for this short piece, but a route from Sandwick over the foothills to the north of Place Fell, including the spectacular peak of The Knight, was memorable. My most unforgettable excursion was on a glorious autumn day in Upper Eskdale, starting with Goat Crag and finishing with Border End. Among the summits along the route were the wonderfully named Silverybield, Scar Lathing and Throstlehow Crag. The view from these tops around the head of Eskdale encompassing Slight Side, the Scafells, Esk Pike and Bowfell was breathtaking – Lake District walking at its very best. So there is life after the 214. Just get off the wellworn Wainwright routes as I did, and enjoy! Martin Roberts – Hexham Member No. 742 However, there are some excellent tops, which might normally be bypassed, and I think the greatest value of ‘doing the Birketts’ is that it takes one off the 9 EVENT The Coppermines REPORT & Lakes Cottages Society Walk: Reston Scar Saturday 31 March 2012 With 2012 being the Wainwright Society’s 10th Anniversary, it was decided that some of the most popular walks I have led for members over the past nine years would be repeated in this year’s Walks programme. The first walk for 2012 was to Reston Scar. AW writes in The Outlying Fells of Lakeland: ‘There must be many readers who, like the author, have been passing Reston Scar en route for the Lakes with no more than a glance up at it ... This is a fine place for a siesta on a sunny day (with a tarn to paddle in)’. Coniston - Sawrey - Windermere - Ambleside The Duddon Valley - Broughton - Langdale Over 70 unique cottages & group accommodation of quality and character in stunning mountain scenery! Country, Village & Mountain cottages, large & small. Log fires, exposed beams, and walks from the door. Great weeks, weekends & short breaks for couples, families & groups. Sleep 2 - 30. The Estate Office, The Bridge, Coniston Village 015394 41765 www.coppermines.co.uk Pets Welcome! www.lakedistrictfordogs.co.uk Low Howe Cottage Coniston 4 - 10 Dixon Ground Coniston 2 - 30 Quality Accredited Agency Assessed Tarn Foot The Duddon Valley 2- 3 Visit our websites for live up to date availability & secure online bookings www.coppermines.co.uk www.lakescottages.info with lots of photographs & full details of weeks & short breaks It was a lovely sunny morning in Staveley as twenty-eight members and seven dogs met outside the village hall. It was good to see new members joining the walk as well as familiar faces. Leaving Staveley, we turned left along the Kentmere road and almost immediately left again, ascending School Lane to reach a T-junction. Another left turn along this lane brought us to a public footpath signposted ‘Sunny Bank’. The ascent from Sunny Bank to summit of Reston Scar is quite steep and, as height was gained, there were excellent views of Brunt Knott, visited on a Society walk in 2009. We continued our ascent along a stony track beyond Sunny Bank, passing a covered reservoir on the right. The stony track then zigzags up the fellside. Upon reaching a very tall deer-gate, we paused to admire the view of Staveley nestled in the valley below. After photographs were taken, we passed through the deer-gate and then turned left through a gap in the adjacent wall. Usually this section of the walk is very boggy, but after the recent summer-like weather the ground had almost dried up! Reston Scar – photograph by Rob Kane Open country was now attained and we followed an ascending grassy track to the 834ft summit of Reston Scar. Although of modest height, it affords excellent views of the Coniston Old Man range, the Langdale Pikes, High Knott, Hugill Fell, Brunt Knott, Potter Fell and the Howgill Fells. In January 2008, TV presenter Julia Bradbury and family members joined the Society walk to Reston Scar before she gave a talk and slideshow presentation prior to the Society’s AGM. After a rest to admire the views and take photographs, and Society member Phil Catterall had made a radio broadcast from the summit, we made our way back down to Staveley to enjoy lunch at either Wilf’s Café or The Eagle and Child pub, both favourites watering holes of Society members. It had been another most enjoyable Society walk. Caroline Nichol – Lytham Walks Organiser 11 What I love about the Lakes – Hunter Davies farm shop • tea room • craft gallery • farm trail Why do you love the Lake District so much? The rain, obviously! Which is your favourite pub or restaurant in the Lakes and why? The Kirkstile Inn at Loweswater – I do PR for them and should get a free drink next time – so could you please print this answer in large capitals? Cheers! When was your first visit to the Lakes? ‘Low Sizergh Barn serves top notch, home cooked food.’ Country Walking magazine Born here, under a crag on Crummock Water. I tell a lie, I was dropped by an eagle heading for Mellbreak; no, hold on, I was the love-child of Melvyn Bragg and the Maid of Buttermere. Would you like me memoirs? Farm Shop: 9.00am - 5.30pm, Tea Room: 9.30am - 5.00pm (10.00am Sunday) • Sizergh LA8 8AE • lowsizerghbarn.co.uk • 015395 60426 ONE STORE SO MUCH TO OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK EXPLORE RAIN OR SHINE, GREAT FOR ALL THE FAMILY FIVE FLOORS OF TOP OUTDOOR GEAR RELAX IN ABRAHAM’S CAFÉ BOOT HIRE & JUNIOR BOOT EXCHANGE THE TOP SKI & SKI BOOT EXPERTS IN THE LAKES YOUR CLOSEST SKI SERVICE CENTRE FREE DRINK AT ABRAHAM’S CAFÉ Too few – probably about 50. It’s me knee, Ivy, it’s hagony! I have walked Hadrian’s Wall, coast to coast, but that’s all. (See knee above.) What was your funniest moment in the Lakes? Because they are free. Which Lake District person do you most admire? Melvyn Bragg. I do envy his hair, but he has promised to leave it to me! Why are the Lakes so special for you? What, if anything, spoils the Lakes for you? Nothing. I hate people who moan on that the Lakes are being ruined. No chance. And those who draw up the bridge when they get inside and don’t want the great unwashed to enter, which is how Wordsworth used to think. Have you ever camped out wild/stayed in an unusual place in the Lake District? Yup – several times – best was by the river in the Duddon Valley, waking up to a swim in the river then cooking bacon and sausages. The only thing that spoiled it – lack of rain. Do you have a favourite bit of walking gear or clothing? 2 Borrowdale Road, Keswick CA12 5DA T 017687 72178 ∙ www.georgefisher.co.uk GF Wainwright Footsteps Ad.indd 1 Do you happen to know how many of Wainwright’s 214 fells you have climbed? A huge mountain in the Pictorial Guides which I climbed over in Stephen Mathews’ Bookcase shop in Castle Street, Carlisle. I had no ropes or crampons at the time, either. Rain, of course, or did I already say that? Show this advert to the staff at Abraham’s and get a free drink with any food purchased! In bed. Failing that, Bequia in the West Indies. Have you done or considered doing the Coast to Coast Walk? What is your best memory from the Lake District? Relax, unwind and plan your next adventure. In your career as a journalist, you have visited many places in the world. If you can’t be in the Lake District, what would your favourite place be? What was the first fell or crag in the Lakes that you climbed? Telling my children I was going to go up Great Cockup. I didn’t laugh, as I don’t tell vulgar jokes, but did they holler! 5 floors of top outdoor gear: Hunter at home in Loweswat er – photograph by Phil Rigby, Cumb ria Life Wellies. 02/05/2012 16:46 13 A Dutch Passion for the Lakes For as long as I can remember, Great Britain has been my favourite country. You could say I am an Anglophile – for instance, I love to watch cricket. Nobody in my circle understands any of this. They think that my love for all things British is a bit over-the-top – especially my enthusiasm for this most strange sport of all, where spectators bring picnic baskets and knit sweaters during ‘test matches’ that can last five days. Nevertheless, there you have it. I love Great Britain. Nothing can be done about it. For the last thirty years, I have taken my summer holidays in Great Britain. I’ve been camping in the south, have cycled in the west, walked along Cornwall’s coast, toured by coach in Wales, walked in the north and travelled in Scotland. By the way, it’s all Mr Hunter Davies’ fault! In the early eighties, I read his book A Walk Around the Lakes and was hooked, and I then felt there was no time left to discover other places of interest or beauty in the world. After reading the book, I took the first opportunity I had and set off for the Lakes. I took a bus, a boat, a bus again, and after many hours I arrived in Keswick. With not much money in my pocket (early in my career!), I camped ten days and walked for hours and hours. I fell in love! Just like Wainwright and numerous others. My first camping site was in Braithwaite. It was glorious weather. My small tent stood in a secluded spot next to a little murmuring brook. I slept wonderfully well. The North Western Fells, Book Six of Wainwright’s Pictorial Guides, was my constant companion. Grisedale Pike was my first mountain climb. As you probably know, my home country Holland is quite flat. Although I walked many kilometres in the Dutch countryside, and practised in the village of Berg en Dal, where there are some humble hills, my muscles were not used to this kind of exercise. But I soon got used to it and my first choice of a mountain turned out to be a wise one. It was sometimes steep, but easy going. I’ll never forget the first view of the Coledale Valley beneath me. Normally, I am a very level-headed Dutch woman, but that day I stood there with tears in my eyes. Okay, I had had a tough year with lots of troubles and was probably not that strong in keeping down-to-earth, but that first view made me very, very happy. further. Mist came in rapidly and visibility was down to zero! I realised how dangerous the situation had become. There I was, on my hands and feet like a fly on the wall. To the right and to the left there was nothing but steep ground and a long drop. Coast to Copast Walk Riekie at Nine Standards Rigg, Helvellyn was one of the (many) tops I hadn’t yet reached. I know it is the favourite of crowds of people and nowadays you almost have to queue up to get to the top. But outside the summer season, I thought it could be very attractive. During a very wet, short autumn holiday, I decided to climb it, but up to the last day of my stay at Glenridding Youth Hostel and due to continuing misty and wet weather, I had almost given up hope of making the attempt. But, on the morning of that last day, it looked promising – it was dry and I thought ‘now or never’! I started from Glenridding for the eastern approach via Striding Edge which, according to Wainwright, was the best way of all, with good paths throughout. I reached and climbed the flanks of Birkhouse Moor and went through the Hole in the Wall. During the last half hour, I had noticed the changing weather conditions. It had become a little darker but it was still dry. The views were long gone and there was no-one in sight. But that didn’t bother me; my aim was to reach the top, and I pushed all doubts away. I was almost there, why should I stop now? I was in good shape, I could take on Striding Edge – it might not be easy, but surely it wasn’t impossible! So I thought. How stupid can you be! When I reached the rock-chimney, I froze and couldn’t go any Like the early writers, I found Striding Edge a place of terror. I remembered Wainwright’s words: ‘In a mist, on a calm day, the Edge is a really fascinating place.’ Well, not for me it wasn’t on this terrible day. I could only sit tight and wait. Then I thought I heard voices. I wondered if I was imagining it, but soon I heard them again. I called out for help and, to my relief, two young men appeared out of the mist. We were glad to see each other. Together we climbed and stumbled over the rocks and eventually we reached the summit and stopped to take a photograph. After some minutes resting in the shelter, we started to look for the path for our descent but unfortunately were unsuccessful in the misty conditions. But, again, help was near – now in the form of a large group of Scouts. Their leaders knew the summit very well and we joined them. I was given a number – 16 – and every five minutes we had to call out our number. How clever! I reached the Youth Hostel at a somewhat late hour, soaked to the skin but, thanks to the Scouts, in good health. It took some time before I had the courage to tell the home front of my adventure. When I did, I had to make a solemn promise never to do such a stupid thing again! I did, in fact, learn my lesson for, since that day, I always look at the weather forecast before I go out and if there’s any doubt during the walk, I turn round and go back! Over the years I have enjoyed many happy days in the Lakes and am planning to do so again for many more to come. Riekie Tonk – Nijmegen, the Netherlands Membership No. 1552 Riekie at St. Bees, starting the Coast to Coast Walk Riekie and ‘rescuer’, Helvellyn 14 That first week in the Lake District was the best holiday I ever had. In the years following that extraordinary holiday, I read and learned about the history, the landscape, Wordsworth and other Lakes Poets, the Lakeland sports, how to avoid crowds and I also learned about the importance of keeping safe. Let me tell you about an experience that taught me a hard lesson. Binders for Footsteps Following a suggestion from one of our members we have now produced binders which will hold three years’ worth of issues of Footsteps, allowing these to be preserved for future reference in a smart, convenient manner and safer from damage. Full details of how to order are now on the website in the Merchandise section. 15 Fundraising News BOOK REVIEW Walking with the Brontës in West Yorkshire by Norman and June Buckley This pocket-sized book is the third written by Norman and June Buckley that introduces the reader to a series of walks with a literary connection. The first two books, Walking with Beatrix Potter (reviewed in Footsteps September 2007) and Walking with Wordsworth (reviewed September 2010) both covered walks in the Lake District. For this latest book, Norman and Jean have journeyed from their Cumbrian home in Windermere to West Yorkshire and east Lancashire to devise a series of walks where there are connections with the Brontë family – their homes, their places of education, their workplaces and the buildings and landscape which so influenced the content of their novels. At the eastern side of the area covered by the book is ‘Shirley Country’, so called because it provided the setting for Charlotte’s novel Shirley. From here, at Oakwell Hall near Birstall, across to the fifteenth and final walk in the book around Gawthorpe Hall near Burnley, runs a linear footpath, the Brontë Way. It is 42 miles long and links many of the sites associated with this historic family. Several of the walks in the book incorporate part of this long-distance footpath. Most of the walks are relatively short, ranging from 1½ to 6¼ miles in length, which gives time to visit some of the places lived in or visited by the Brontë family. These could include Tunstall Church, which the girls would have visited each Sunday, and the school at Cowan Bridge where the girls were educated for a number of years and which later became the setting for Lowood in Jane Eyre. Other places worthy of visits on the walks include Oakwell Hall, Shibden Hall, The Bell Chapel at Thornton (the village on the outskirts of Bradford where Charlotte, Branwell, Emily and Anne were 16 all born), East Riddlesden Hall, Ponden Reservoir and Hall, plus of course Top Withens, high on the moors above the Parsonage at Haworth and the inspiration for Emily’s Wuthering Heights. The book begins with a brief history of the Brontë family. Apart from a detailed description of the walk, each chapter has a hand-drawn map and photographs mostly taken by the authors, followed by notes about the Brontë association with the locations, and extracts from their writings. My wife and I walked several of the routes described in the authors’ previous books and thoroughly enjoyed doing so. This latest book, containing walks much nearer to our home in Wharfedale, will be well used this summer and autumn and I am sure will give us as much walking pleasure as the others did. ISBN 978-0-7712-3254-9. Published by Frances Lincoln £8.99 (£7.20 to Society members) John Burland – Otley Membership No. 2 At the 2012 AGM in Staveley on Saturday 31 March, Sean Day, Director of the Lake District Calvert Trust, treated us to an insight into the work of the Trust with a fascinating illustrated talk on its work. The combined Wainwright Society and Calvert Trust DVD was also shown which highlighted the Society’s fundraising events against a background of Calvert’s wideranging outdoor activities. After the talk, Eric Robson and Jenny Whalley presented Sean with a cheque for £14,000, representing the total raised by members during 2011 for the Trust. This has been a fabulous effort by many people and, once again, a record amount was donated. Work has already started on raising funds for our 2012 beneficiary, Cumbria Wildlife Trust. The first main event has been the 60-50-40 Challenge and the Footsteps team would like to offer congratulations to everyone who Cheque presentation by Caroline Nichol to Susan Garnett, Cha ir of Sedbergh Local Support Group, Cumbria Wild life Trust took part. The last day of the Challenge, on Saturday 26 May, was marked by a Society Walk to Arant Haw and Winder. The first cheque presentation to Cumbria Wildlife Trust was made at the end of the walk in Sedbergh. A report on the walk will appear in the next issue of Footsteps. The Wainwright Society 10th Anniversary Par ty ... Wilf’s at Staveley – Saturday 10th November 7.00 p.m . The Order Form for the Party at Wilf’s in Staveley is now available on The Society Website at http://www.wainwright.org.uk/downloads/wilfs_10th_ anniversary.pdf (If you don’t have access to the web, please telephone John Bewick on 01623 796497 to have an order form sent to you). Tickets are £17.50 each and include a 2-course Hot Buffet Dinner, a selection of alcoholic and non-alcoholic drinks and celebration ‘amusements’. Members can buy tickets for immediate family and also for one non-member guest. We may have to limit numbers dependent on demand, so get your order in quickly to avoid disappointment! 17 Ouse Bridge House Bassenthwaite Lake, Lake District, Cumbria DVD REVIEW Great Walks – Wainwright’s Northern Fells DVD produced by Striding Edge and presented by Stuart Maconie When AW published his Pictorial Guide to the Northern Fells fifty years ago, he dedicated it to ‘those who travel alone, the solitary wanderers on the fells who find contentment in the companionship of the mountains and of the creatures of the mountains’. Award-winning broadcaster Stuart Maconie is the presenter of an 80-minute DVD that records two days he spent visiting many of these northern fell summits including Great Calva and Knott, Carrock Fell and Ullock Pike, Souther Fell and Blencathra. He also encounters Candleseaves Bog, Whitewater Dash Falls and the lonely expanses of Back o’ Skidda’ as well as the majestic Skiddaw massif itself. Friendly, family run guest house with amazing views over Bassenthwaite Lake and Skiddaw. Excellent menu using local produce available in our licensed restaurant. Conveniently located for walks with packed lunches, drying facilities and large car park available. Walking groups welcome. A warm welcome, excellent service and delicious food in a stunning and peaceful location. Telephone : 017687 76322 Email : [email protected] www.ousebridge.com Silver per person per night £36.00 to £50.00 (Quote ‘Wainwright Society’ when booking, to receive your 10% discount off these rates). Such is the popularity of the northern fells these days that they are no longer quite as solitary as they were in AW’s day: he wrote that during the two years of compiling his guide in the early 60s he saw walkers on only three of the fells. While it is probably safe to say that one is less likely to see other walkers on these fells than in any of the other six areas covered by AW’s guides, it appears that the northern fells are very popular with our members as all twenty-four summits included in this year’s Challenge were snapped up within three weeks of the application forms being issued. The photography in this DVD is by Janusz Ostrowski and, as usual for him, is outstanding. Research by Eric Robson and his production team has led to the inclusion of some very interesting material – circular sheepfolds, the mineral campbellite on High Pike, the remains of the Roman fort on Carrock Fell and details of the life- cycle of the flying ants encountered on the ascent to this summit are incorporated in the narration by Stuart and Eric. Also featured on the DVD is Ian Tyler, curator of the Keswick Mining Museum and guest speaker at the Society’s 2009 Memorial Lecture, who conveys his geological knowledge to Stuart during their meeting on the top of High Pike. The photography is superbly enhanced by haunting Celtic background music. This DVD depicts an excellent journey over these lesser-known fells with their solitude and mining history and is one that I am sure other Society members will enjoy just as much as I did. The Northern Fells DVD is available from Striding Edge Productions www.stridingedge.com at £14.99, with a 10% discount for Society members. John Burland – Otley Membership No. 2 19 So, what do you do after climbing the 214 Wainwrights? In order to raise money for charity (ending up with £10,000 for the Rosemere Cancer Foundation), I visited the summits of all 214 Wainwrights in just 55 days in 2009. I have to admit, I enjoyed myself enormously and ended with an even higher regard for the no. 1 fellwalker than I’d had before. But what could I do next? I needed another project, and since I enjoyed cycling I hit on the idea of cycling around the entire coastline of Great Britain, this time fundraising for Cancer Research UK. And so preparations began for what was to be a great adventure in 2011 Planning the coastal route wasn’t as simple as it sounds. It was a delusion to think that from my home town of Clitheroe, I could ride to Lytham, turn right and then keep the sea on my left-hand side for 4,500 miles until I returned home! In fact, to be faithful to the idea of staying as close to the coast as possible whilst remaining on mostly tarmac roads, I ended up with a route containing over 4,000 junctions, and this took many hours of plotting. I also made the decision to use a bikemounted GPS on to which I could download each day’s route – a good move, as it turned out. The early months of 2011 were taken up with searching for a motorhome, getting sponsorship, organising support crews (who would drive, and Bill at Stac Pollaidh, NW Scotl 20 cook and generally look after my needs in weekly shifts) and dozens of other tasks. For a while I wondered if I might be over-planning, but in hindsight I don’t think one can prepare too much! I set off from Clitheroe on 10 May in glorious weather, but this soon deteriorated. My cunning plan, to cycle round Scotland in the Met Office’s ‘reliably’ gorgeous spring weather, was sadly misplaced. By 23 May, the winds around Fort William were gusting at 100mph and a tree was blown on to the motorhome with us all inside – very scary, I can tell you! But as luck would have it, in a vehicle just behind us were a couple of lads with a chainsaw and, after two hours, not only was the tree cut away from the vehicle and the road cleared, but we were relieved to find that the only serious damage was a broken windscreen. With a bit of cajoling we got that replaced the following day on the Isle of Mull (this and Skye being the two islands included on my route). On Britain’s most testing and awe-inspiring hill road, the Bealach na Bà which leads to Applecross, I was literally blown off the bike and unable to stand, never mind ride, so I gave up for the day and returned the next morning, carrying on without missing a metre of road! The next few weeks went by at a steady pace of around seventy-five miles per day, interspersed with shorter ‘rest days’ of about thirty miles. One of the essential aspects of long-distance bike rides is eating! A big breakfast, TWO lunches, an even bigger evening meal, plus continuous snacking and drinking whilst on the bike meant that my total weight-loss for the trip was only two or three pounds. John o’ Groats is the end of the road for most cyclists who start at Land’s End, but I had more than 2,000 miles still to go, a point which I made in the famous Visitors’ Book. At Skipsea in Yorkshire on my way south down the east coast, the road had disappeared due to coastal erosion, necessitating some hasty re-routing. In Kent, an elderly lady drove into the rear of my bike, but fortunately I had a spare bike, although on the The finishing line at Clitheroe same day (which, at ninety-nine miles, was the longest) I had my one and only puncture, caused by sharp flints at Dungeness. One amusing aspect of the south coast was the variety of ferries – from the (seemingly) gargantuan Gosport–Portsmouth, to the tiny Helford Passage, and the shockingly pink Warsash–Southampton: twenty altogether, and all great fun. Devon and Cornwall were beautiful, but sticking to the coast meant negotiating one long steep hill after another. During five days I climbed more than the height of Everest! The glorious Devon weather lasted around the south-west peninsula, but on the final leg through Wales the elements turned against me again. All I remember of Abersoch is the rain coming down so hard that it even made stair-rods look anorexic! I was extremely glad of the GPS – any paper maps would have been reduced to pulp very quickly. The support I got was amazing – friends old and new either helped or just came out to meet me, as did people I had never met before but had either read my blog or heard of my exploits via Twitter (which I subscribed to for the first time and found surprisingly good). A few people even cycled with me, ranging from half a day to a full week in the case of two good friends. Sponsors were particularly generous – including the Caravan Club and almost all the other sites where I was given free accommodation, Caledonian MacBrayne, and even Shell and Texaco which provided some of the fuel for the motorhome. A big thank you to everyone, too numerous to mention. By the time I arrived back in Clitheroe on 20 July, bang on schedule, donations for Cancer Research UK were coming in thick and fast and the final total was just over £31,000! In ten weeks I had cycled 4,440 miles, ‘climbed’ over 200,000 feet and probably burnt off over 350,000 calories. I think I’ll go and relax by having a few days in the Lake District. No doubt I’ll be getting itchy feet again by the time this appears, so if you have any ideas, let me know. You can read more, and get in touch, by visiting my blog at www.billhoneywell.blogspot.com. Bill Honeywell – Clitheroe Member No. 1242 21 My Favourite Lakeland Walk – High Gait Crags, Pike de Bield & Esk Pike from Seathwaite I don’t actually have a favourite walk. I feel a bit like Wainwright when he said his favourite fell is the one you happen to be on, although there are some I would exclude from that. However, this walk, which Kevin and I did last year (13 July), was very special for me as it marked my completion of visiting all but one of the fells in Bill Birkett’s (BB) book The Complete Lakeland Fells. The exception is Pillar Rock; I’m a walker not a climber, and Pillar Rock is too far out of my comfort zone. I had two BBs left, High Gait Crags and Pike de Bield, both on the ridge coming down from Esk Pike between Upper Eskdale and the valley of Yeastyrigg Gill which drops down south from Ore Gap. Based as we are near Keswick, we decided to walk from Seathwaite. We’d waited for a nice day, and a bit of extra walking (including ascent and descent) to avoid too long a drive was an easy choice. Our initial ascent was up the pleasant, if fairly steep, path beside Grains Gill, its numerous delightful falls and pools providing plenty of excuses to pause and enjoy the view (aka catch our breath). As you near the top, the dramatic rock face of Great End greets you in all its splendour. The walk continued beside the colourful gorge of Ruddy Gill towards the shelter below the true Esk Hause. Although we had not yet reached a summit, we now headed down towards Angle Tarn, descending until we picked up the path to Ore Gap. AW wrote: ‘The climb to Ore Gap from the Esk Hause path is unexpectedly easy’ (Southern Fells, Esk Pike 10) and we arrived at the hause in no time. As we strolled over the level ground south of the hause, our main target for the day, Pike de Bield, came into sight. ‘It’s just up there to the right, no problem; we’ll be up it in no time,’ we said. Well, not quite; we had to do High Gait Crags first and that is way further along the ridge and 770ft lower. Why? Because I wanted to finish on the highest fell I had left. So, you’ve guessed it! After a short stop for refreshment, we were heading down for the second time on the walk and on this occasion it was a lot further, but it was new territory for us, which is always welcome. There’s no clear path where we started the descent but, eventually, one develops on the east side of Yeastyrigg Gill. As it descends, the gill creates quite a deep gorge and there was no alternative but to follow the path above the gorge until it dropped down towards Green Hole and returned to the gill. The water level was quite low but there was plenty of erosion evidence to show that it must be spectacular when in spate. (At this point, we’d just descended about 1000ft). We were now in pathless territory, but managed to make our way up through Greenhole Crags and across the southern end of Pike de Bield Moss to the highest point of High Gait Crags, ‘the furthest bump, a cairned rock outcrop’ (BB). The view from here was really spectacular, with the Scafells, Esk Pike, Bowfell and Crinkle Crags forming a wonderful arc of grand mountains above us, while to the south was the lovely valley of Upper Eskdale below and Morecambe Bay and the coast in the distance. Bizarrely, since this is a rarely visited spot, we learned later that Andy Beck had been wildcamping here the day before, picking up more references for his Wainwrights in Colour project. We could have stayed here for ages drinking in the scenery, but eventually managed to drag ourselves away and wind our way up on intermittent paths between Pike de Bield Moss and Yeastyrigg Crags to Pike de Bield. This is one of those fells with several bumps and, despite the clear weather, we made use of our GPS to check which one was the highest. Kevin looks towards Crinkle Crags from High Gait Crags 22 What a spot to finish visiting all the BBs! If I’d picked a final fell early on, I couldn’t have done better. As it was, I’d chosen Pike de Bield only when nearing the end because it was the highest one still to do. With good weather and hours of daylight left, there was plenty of time to enjoy the moment, having our late lunch while soaking up the views towards the grand rocky Eskdale face of the Scafells. Mission accomplished – Jenny on Pike de Bield Where to now? Well, we didn’t want to do a fell walk without a Wainwright so we followed the broadening ridge up to Esk Pike. En route, we came across a memorial cairn with two plaques – one to Gerry Charnley 1929–1982 and one to Barbara Charnley 1936–2009 – and a small bunch of flowers. What a wonderful spot for a memorial. I know that memorials on the fells are controversial, but this was well away from any paths in an unfrequented area. Having climbed Esk Pike and back on familiar territory, we dropped down to Esk Hause and the path we had used on the way up beside Ruddy Gill. Not wanting to retrace our ascent route, we continued down to Sprinkling Tarn where we had a last stop before carrying on to Styhead and the tourist route to Seathwaite via Stockley Bridge. We gave the Taylor Gill Force route a miss as our legs were tired and water levels were relatively low. I can recommend an exploration of this south ridge of Esk Pike to anyone who enjoys getting away from it all and having the fells to themselves. From leaving Seathwaite until descending Esk Pike nearly six hours later, we met only three people and this was a sunny July day. Perhaps I should say thank you to AW for not including either of the fells on this ridge in his Pictorial Guide, thus leaving such a wonderful area to be explored in magnificent tranquillity. Jenny Whalley – Applethwaite Member No. 59 23 Stone Circles of Lakeland Stone circles feature quite extensively in the writings and artwork of Alfred Wainwright. No less than ten full-size drawings can be found in his sketchbooks: four pictures of Castlerigg and one each of six other circles – Moor Divock, Kinniside, Swinside, Birkrigg, Long Meg and Bleasdale (the latter in Bowland). Cumbria, in fact, is one of the richest areas in the country for these monuments: there are around fifty, including some of the earliest in Britain. Curious to relate, but certainty about the date and function of stone circles was greater in the past than it is now. Many 19th-century writers (for example Harriet Martineau in her Guide to the Lakes) associated the circles with the Druids. Indeed, Martineau calls Castlerigg ‘the Druids’ Temple’, and relates a story of human sacrifice by fire being thwarted by a sudden cataract of water from the mountains. When I first visited Castlerigg, some thirty-five years ago, it was with an archaeology student who told me about the astronomical significance of these circles, and how the stones line up with local landmarks and key events in the calendar, such as the location of sunrise at the solstice. That indeed is still a common theory, and many measurements have been made and alignments identified. But some of the most recent writers doubt the astronomical connection, pointing out that the circles contain so many stones, and there are so many points on the skyline that have some significance, that a number of alignments would be inevitable through coincidence alone. AW, in his Fifth Lakeland Sketchbook, says that Castlerigg is ‘often wrongly referred to as the Druids’ Circle’. Current estimates of its antiquity range from 1600–3200BC. This long pre-dates the Druids, but there is little else that is certain about this or other Cumbrian circles. Some have been analysed as carefully contrived geometrical figures, and some appear to be constructed by reference to a constant unit of measurement, endearingly named the ‘megalithic yard’. Some have evidence of burials or cremations, others do not. In truth, 24 it seems that in the 21st century we cannot really be sure what their original function was. What we do know is that almost all are on elevated sites which were occupied and cultivated until cooling of the climate, some 3,500 years ago, made these areas unviable. No circles were built after about 1500BC. One quirk about stone circles which has survived to the present day is the theory that it is impossible to count the number of stones accurately. Harriet Martineau relates this in relation to the Long Meg circle near Penrith. Legend has it that a witch and her daughters dancing here were turned to stone, and if anyone counts the same number of stones twice the spell will be broken, and they will return to life! Castlerigg has a similar myth that the stones cannot be counted although a survey concluded that in fact there were originally forty-two stones, of which thirty-eight remain today. Within the ring is a rectangle of a further ten stones; this is a very unusual feature, the purpose of which is not known. What everyone agrees about is that Castlerigg is in a spectacular location, and the most visited megalithic site in Cumbria. The circle which most closely conforms to the megalithic yard theory of construction is Kinniside (otherwise known as Blakeley Raise). But for anyone who knows their Wainwright, mention of Kinniside rings alarm bells, for at this site AW felt that he had been duped. But was he? Circle Richard Daly at Castlerigg Stone Clough Head from Castlerigg Stone Circle The story goes like this. In The Western Fells (Grike 2), AW recounts the story that the original twelve stones of Kinniside circle had been removed by local farmers for use as building materials, but that ‘forty years ago a grand job of restoration was accomplished by an enterprising working party’ which cleaned out and measured the sockets, retrieved the original stones, and recreated the circle. It has to be said that this sounds highly unlikely, and by the time he wrote A Coast to Coast Walk, Wainwright had changed his mind about it, saying that the original story was ‘now regarded as a fib, the true facts being ... that the stones were arranged on the site merely as an example of a prehistoric circle by a local archaeologist’. story. Some recount the story exactly as originally told by AW. Others say that it is simply a modern creation. One author writes that its proportions perfectly illustrate use of the megalithic yard (which was not actually discovered until the 1960s). Another account claims that some of the stones are original, and others are not. Local newspaper stories published as recently as 2009 suggest that a Dr Quynne of Frizington, who was interested in archaeology, believed that there had been a stone circle on the site, and he identified stones locally and paid a man named Harry Sharpe thirty shillings to dig them up and move them to the current location, using two horses, ‘where he set them up under Dr Quynne’s supervision’. Yet the truth seems to be somewhere between these extremes. The National Monuments Record, maintained by English Heritage, recounts that an original circle was apparently dismantled in the 18th century, and restoration was undertaken by a Dr Quine in 1925, who set the stones in concrete. ‘Whether he used the original stones, and whether or not he erected them in their original stone holes, is unclear.’ The Record concludes that the circle ‘has all the appearance of genuine antiquity’. Was there a circle there originally? If so, did it look like the current version, or even contain any of the same stones? Maybe AW was half-right in the first place, and it was a grand job of restoration, albeit surely not with all the original stones. We may never know for sure. Stone circles are still weaving their myths and legends even in our times. If there is one thing that seems to remain constant, it is that what we think we know about them today will be called into doubt tomorrow! In fact, various current websites and other published works contain virtually every possible variation on the Richard Daly – Sandside, Cumbria Membership No. 6 25 BOOK REVIEW In addition to the book and DVD reviewed on pages 16 & 19, we have highlighted below three books that we think may be of interest to readers. Note that one is offered as a prize. Rainy Days in the Lake District by Val Corbett ISBN: 978-0-712-3247-1. Published by Frances Lincoln £9.99 (£8.00 to Society members) Val Corbett will be well-known to Society members as a regular contributor of the photograph on the front pages of Footsteps as well as for her various photographic books. This latest, pocket-sized book contains over 150 photographs that capture rain and its varying effects on the landscape and communities of the Lake District. A signed copy of Val’s book is offered as a prize to the member whose name is first drawn from the hat who has named the ridge route about which AW wrote: ‘This is a walk to wish on one’s worst enemy, especially after rain.’ Send your answer, by 31 July, to [email protected] or by mail to me at 18 Pease Way, Histon, Cambridge, CB24 9YZ. Best Walks on Exmoor by Richard Webber ISBN: 978-0-7112-3287-7 Best Walks in the Chilterns by Roy Woodcock, revised by Steve Davison ISBN 978-0-7112-3288-4 Each published by Frances Lincoln £12.99 (£10.39 to Society members) Best Walks on Exmoor covers thirty of the area’s best walks, varying in length and difficulty. Each walk is carefully described, including a basic sketch map, detailed route instructions and photographs. The author is a journalist, keen walker and ‘lover of all things Exmoor’. Similar in style is Best Walks in the Chilterns, which covers twenty varied walks in an area of dramatic landscapes. The book was written by now-retired keen walker and walking guide writer, Roy Woodcock, and has been revised by writer, photographer and keen walker, Steve Davison. These pocket-sized books are part of a series that includes ‘best walks’ in Northumberland, the Welsh Borders, southern Wales, north Wales and Ireland. David Johnson Editor 27 ‘Light the Wainwrights’ In 2011, Surrey Police Officer Heather Cooper was murdered, leaving behind two very young children. Heather had been a great fan of ‘Wainwright Country’ and had spent many an hour walking the fells of the Lake District. With this in mind, her friends and colleagues decided to raise funds for the benefit of her children and also to show their respect for their lost friend, by organising an event based on the 214 Wainwright fells. This was named ‘Light the Wainwrights’ and involved trying to have a volunteer, or team of volunteers, climbing each of Wainwright’s 214 summits and, at exactly the same time just before dawn, marking the occasion by shining a light from the summit. Contributions from those taking part and others would make up the fund to assist Heather’s children. When this project was brought to my attention, I felt it only right – from a personal perspective as a retired police officer – that I and other members of the Society should take part and show our support for such a worthwhile cause. I canvassed support on the Society’s website forum and, as so often seems to happen on such occasions, Society members showed their metal with promises of donations and by fourteen volunteering to take part on the walk itself. So, on behalf of the Society, I liaised with Sgt Ian Davies of Surrey Police, Heather’s colleague and Chair of the Surrey Police Federation, and told him that we would like to help out. After discussion, it was decided that our group would climb one of the lower fells with easy access to allow as many members as possible to take part. This would also allow an early start on the Saturday rather than require a night out on the tops. Our choice of Latrigg, the lowest of Wainwright’s Northern Fells, a mile or so north-east of Keswick, and a great vantage point for many of the higher fells, later became more poignant. I travelled up to Lakeland early on the Friday in order to book in with the organisers, who were based at Ambleside Rugby Club. People were turning up from all over the country and many 28 were indeed planning a night on a fell top prior to lighting their ‘beacon’ the following dawn. Some headed for the numerous outdoor retailers in Ambleside to purchase tents and provisions to help get through a cold night. Very early on Saturday 28 April, our party of fourteen set off in clear weather from Spooney Green Lane on the relatively short ascent of Latrigg. Some of us had to learn the etiquette of walking with a head-torch – it’s so easy to ruin your fellow-walker’s night vision by looking straight into their face. The wind got up as we approached the summit and we could see the odd light flicker on and off on nearby fells as others tested their beacons. The organisers had asked for a black-out policy from 4.15am until lighting-up time of 4.30am so that the lighting of the beacons would be more dramatic At the appointed time, we lit our lamp on the summit to shine a light across a sleepy Keswick. As we did, so other summits too delivered their tiny glows in memory of Heather. We could see lights on tops such as Causey Pike and Robinson, and we believe we may even have seen the beacon on Scafell Pike. We also took a moment to pay our respects to Society member James Trevellyan, who sadly had died only days earlier. James was well-known to many members and a popular companion on past Society walks. He had volunteered to climb a Wainwright for this year’s Challenge, and had chosen Latrigg. Therefore, as we made our way down the fell in the growing light of a new day, it was good to think that we had climbed it for him as well. Wainwright Society members on the summit of Latrigg at 4.30am – photograph by Rob Kane The occasion was made more special because of the presence of one member in particular. Very recently beforehand, Merv Brennan had been in hospital after collapsing with a bleed on the brain and things were looking bleak for him. He had made remarkable progress and been discharged just before the day of our walk. He had insisted that his good friend and Society member, Rob Kane, should drive him up to Cumbria in the dead of night so that he could join us on the top of Latrigg. It was a moving experience for us all – Merv, you are a star! I would like to thank everyone who helped out in any way at all in making this event so enjoyable and worthwhile. But I’d like to single out for especial mention Jenny and Kevin Whalley who had an open-house policy for those taking part. Jenny and Kevin live at Applethwaite close to Latrigg and they supplied accommodation, cooked meals and even checked our route before the event to make sure there would be no trip-ups in the dark. After enjoying what was still a very early breakfast together, we went our separate ways feeling we had taken part in a memorable and meaningful project. Some of us then set out for on a long walk among the Uldale Fells, but that’s another story! I’m very pleased to report that we were able to send £350 to the ‘Light the Wainwrights’ fund, made up from £250 donated by members and £100 from Society funds. By late May, the fund was approaching the £50,000 mark. Lindsay Shaw – Henley-In-Arden Membership No. 852 For all the latest news and updates visit www.wainwright.org.uk by Richard Irvine Keswick at dawn – photograph 29 Society News Tickets are selling quickly for this year’s Memorial Lecture at Rheged in November, featuring Alan Hinkes. Alan is part of an exclusive club of only 12 people alive who have climbed all 14 of the world’s 8,000-metre peaks, which is the same number of people who have stood on the moon. To order your tickets, contact Rheged on 01768 868000. New Member Discount offer – Hoseasons. With the success of our discount offer with Cottages4you, we have been offered a member discount on other Hoseasons holidays in the UK. With up to 10% off, the choice includes family holiday parks, lodges, boating holidays, cottages and city break apartments. Full details of how to book are now on our website, under Member Discounts. We have recently set up an on-line membership form. This can be used to join the Society or renew membership, paying the annual subscription via internet banking or by standing order. You can find full details by going to http:// www.wainwright.org.uk/membership.html and clicking on ‘Membership Application Form’. We have already had a number of new members and renewals using this facility. Letters and drawings by AW have been loaned to Ambleside’s Armitt Museum by our Patron, Hunter Davies, and have been on display since 31 March 2012. These are part of his personal collection. Hunter wrote The Wainwright Letters, which was the subject of our sell-out Memorial Lecture in 2011. Amongst the display are two AW self-portraits and a hand-drawn Pictorial Gazette, dated 1926, produced to amuse AW’s colleagues in the office in Blackburn. Worth Walking For Best enjoyed in the pub, Wainwright is inspired by Alfred Wainwright, whose books have guided generations of walkers to experience a taste of the outdoors for many years. With refreshing fruit flavours and a hint of sweetness, this exquisitely lovely golden ale has become universally popular with men and women alike. Whether you’re finishing a five-mile trek or taking a stroll to your local, it’s certainly worth walking for. www.danielthwaites.com www.drinkaware.co.uk As reported in Spring Footsteps, we are making final arrangements for the manufacture and erection of a new Viewfinder for the top of Orrest Head. We are hoping to have this ready to coincide with the Society Walk on 28 July so members and guests can be present for the unveiling ceremony. As this will take place before the Autumn issue of Footsteps, please watch the Society website for full details. Tickets are now on sale for our 10th Anniversary Party at Wilf’s, Staveley, which takes place during our celebration weekend. For full details and how to order, see page 17. Society Sketchbook Project. We have now received members’ photographs for around 20% of the drawings from the (first) Lakeland Sketchbook. You can see these on the website and we hope this will inspire you to take part in this project by searching out AW’s locations during the summer months. Details of how to submit your photos are on the website. 31 Dates for your Diary SOCIETY WALKS 2012 Full details of this year’s walks appeared in Winter 2011/12 Footsteps and are also on the website. • ORREST HEAD, DUBBS RESERVOIR AND APPLETHWAITE QUARRY – Saturday 28 July 8 miles, with 1,300 feet of ascent. ‘Orrest Head, for many of us, is where we came in’ (The Outlying Fells of Lakeland). This fell has been a very popular feature of past Society walks, notably that in June 2010 when we celebrated the 80th anniversary of AW’s first day in the Lake District. • CUNSWICK SCAR AND SCOUT SCAR – Saturday 25 August 5 miles, with 1,000 feet of ascent. This was the very first walk Caroline Nichol led for the Society, in May 2004. The walk, starting at Kendal, was described by AW as ‘above others: a pleasure every step of the way’ (The Outlying Fells of Lakeland). • LATRIGG – Saturday 6 October 6 miles, with 950 feet of ascent. SHOWS Weather permitting, we will be attending the following shows with our marquee. If there are members who are available to help with manning the stand on any of these dates, please get in touch with Mark Johnson at [email protected] • KESWICK SHOW – Monday 27 August • WESTMORLAND SHOW (KENDAL) – Thursday 13 September • BORROWDALE SHOW (ROSTHWAITE) – Sunday 16 September 10th ANNIVERSARY WEEKEND 10 miles, with 2,500 feet of ascent. • 10th WAINWRIGHT MEMORIAL LECTURE, AT RHEGED. SPEAKER: ALAN HINKES – Friday 9 November This walk forms part of our 10th Anniversary celebration weekend. • 10th ANNIVERSARY PARTY AT WILF’S CAFE, STAVELEY – Saturday 10 November • DOVE CRAG – Saturday 10 November. • REMEMBRANCE SERVICE, GREAT GABLE OR CASTLE CRAG – Sunday 11 November The Wainwright Society accepts no responsibility for the views, opinions, products or services contained within the Society magazine, Footsteps, neither is it responsible for their content or accuracy. Footsteps is designed and produced by The Wainwright Society