North Yorkshire in March? You’d pack some serious waterproofs wouldn’t you? And gloves? And a fleece and plenty of thick socks? A nice warm hat? Exposure bag, whistle, torch, half a dozen bottles of Spitfire ale, eight family size bags of Revels – all the usual emergency kit, in case I got caught in a snow drift. But then miraculously, amazingly, wonderfully, beautifully the sun shone.
And shone and shone and shone. Don’t you just love it when that happens? The one thing I really needed in my emergency survival kit was sunblock. But it being the North Yorkshire Moors in March, I hadn’t packed any. Burn David, burn.
So I ended up lugging all this other stuff for mile after mile. Stuff. Just loads and loads of redundant stuff. Really heavy stuff. Soon my hip joints hurt and my knee joints hurt. And my feet hurt – big time. At the end of my first day, I shuffled into my first pit stop (the very pretty village of Levisham) like a weary, second rate specimen of the Walking Dead. Spit bubbles on my cracked lips and murmuring, barely audibly, “pity me, pity me.”
After that first day, I figured I’d have to walk quickly (blisters be damned) if I were to keep to my fairly punishing schedule. So I might not have time
Helmsley Castle
to stop, linger and admire any ruined castles rising out of the morning mist,
Rievaulx Abbey
or a beautiful abbey with attendant posing cattle
Saltburn Viaduct
or an 150 year old brick viaduct as stunning today as the day it was built. Brick!
Some good old fashioned English place-names
I wanted to see some good old fashioned English place-names
Reeking
reeking of an Anglo-Saxon/Norman/Viking past.
Enticed
And I wanted to be enticed by a pretty path. Or two;
Tweaked
to see a coquettish path that tweaked my curious nose and tugged me along, Aunt Polly like, by the ear lobe.
Fulmar
I thought I’d see plenty of wildlife, hopefully something I hadn’t seen before
Red Grouse
and hopefully something with stick-on comedy eyebrows. Unlikely.
Before I set off, I imagined endless trudging along brooding, treacherous and stormy cliffs,
my head cowered by the gale that I marched ever so stoically (and very, very bravely) into.
Stomp, stomp, stomp across the moors, dodging rain squalls with hailstones the size of tennis balls careering about my ears.
Roseberry Topping – possibly the nicest named hill in England
I doubted that the weather would ever afford me a vague hint of the Himalaya
Captain Cook’s monument (horizon left)
or a whiff of the mystical, the magical.
A man
I hoped not to see a soul. Not one. I wanted complete solitude. And yet, one day, I saw THIS man.
But I did want to see some pretty flowers, and maybe, just maybe, a levitating ball of exploding gorse. Result!
A Larch ‘Flower’
And something unfamiliar, at least to my eye. Something microcosmic. (There you go, Stacy).
And a vista. I wanted to snap a nice big vista without some grinning Herbert sidling into frame uninvited. And waving.
An uninvited, grinning, waving, paramilitary clad Herbert.
Damn.
What I did get was an eight day walk in North Yorkshire. And it was amazing. I know that is an overused and consequently impoverished word. But it was. Amazing. And very beautiful. And very long.