Archive for October, 2007

Everything’s coming up roses…

Wednesday, October 31st, 2007

Assuming all goes to plan, later this week, Steph and I will get the keys to our climbing rose-plagued (white rose of course!) chocolate box cottage in the Yorkshire Dales.

That means we’ll be prioritising cleaning, painting and decorating over website maintenance – and as broadband takes days to set up (modern technology, huh?) we’ll be cut off from the modern world for a short while. 

Nip back in mid-November and you’ll find new stuff. In the meantime, have a great Hallowe’en and a lovely Plot Night.

Hopefully those of you whose browsers had problems viewing the site can now see everything. Let me know if not, and we’ll attack it when we’re reconnected to the rest of the world…

Have fun,

John

Dreaming of a hike beside the seaside

Tuesday, October 30th, 2007

Ever since I thru’ hiked North America’s 2653-mile Pacific Crest Trail in 2004, I’ve been itching to get another long distance route under my belt – or rather, beneath the soles of my trail shoes.

It’s been just a tad frustrating to come to the real-life realisation that I can’t just drop everything and fly off to the States again to hike, say, the 3100-mile Continental Divide as easily as I did the PCT. The PCT hike was a dream come true; right now I’ve other dreams to be living out – exciting ones, yes, but dreams that can’t be measured in miles.

So I’ve been paying more than a little attention to the Government’s proposal to increase our “rights” of access to the English and Welsh coastlines. Here, by-the-seaside-beside-the-sea, is a hiking challenge on our own doorstep that’s longer and more demanding – certainly in terms of the weather likely to be encountered! – than any of North America’s Triple Crown trails: imagine setting off to walk the entire UK coastline.

Marry a UK coastline walk with a Land’s End to John o’ Groats hike and a Cape Wrath to Dover epic and you’ve a trio of routes that should keep long distance backpackers busy for years.

I’ve outlined my proposal for such a UK Triple Crown elsewhere on my website. If we can get such a challenge recognised, and up and running, I reckon it’d be a worthy rival to the American triptych, one that doesn’t demand an environment-damaging flight across the pond; that doesn’t involve the frustration of making plans to hike in a foreign country; and one that you can nibble away at over several years if you can’t afford the time to hike one of the trails in one fell swoop.

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A new life in the hills

Thursday, October 25th, 2007

It’s taken a while but, at long last, the chance to settle in our new base in the Yorkshire Dales seems to be within our grasp.

Several weeks ago my partner Steph and I left the city of Glasgow, where for the last 13 years I’ve been gainfully employed as deputy editor of TGO Magazine – also known as The Great Outdoors, Britain’s longest-established (don’t dare say “oldest” or “long in the tooth”) monthly magazine for hill-walkers and backpackers.

In just a few days we hope to move into our new home – a 300-year-old rose-adorned cottage with a real, cosy pub less than 20 yards away – and to begin our new life together in the lee of some of the Dales’ iconic hills.

I’ll be starting a new life as a freelance outdoor writer – talk about poacher-turned-gamekeeper! – while Steph begins an exciting new phase in her career as a landscape architect with a new employer just a short commute away.

Over the coming months we’ll be filling this website with a bunch of entertaining features, soundfiles, videos, images and links so, please, bookmark this page and keep coming back to discover what we’ve been up to and what we’ve got to offer.

See you soon!

John