A Recipe for Porridge

Day 66 of the End to End started at Rigg and went along to Eastrigg. It was an unpleasant busy road and I found myself walking quicker to get it over. My first mile in 17 minutes may be the quickest of the walk so far.
At Eastrigg I stopped at the Devil’s Porridge Museum, said to be the best tourist attraction in Dumfries and Galloway. In case you didn’t know it’s a different sort of Porridge. Devil’s Porridge was the name given to the noxious mixture that was used to make munitions fuses in WW1. The massive factories at Gretna and Eastrigg were set up to make it in 1915. Women came from all over the North of England and South Scotland to work there at what was quite a dangerous place at the time.
They required accommodation and two towns were built to house them: Eastrigg with its Commonwealth Street names, and the part of Gretna that I walked through yesterday afternoon.


The museum also charts the end of the factory once the war was over, and then how the area came to be involved in WW2 and in the development of nuclear weapons using the plutonium from the nearby nuclear power plant. It’s an interesting place. The Munition sites are still visible on the ordinance survey maps were are using for the walk, stretching from here to Longtown in Cumbria.
We had our lunch in the museum cafe. No Porridge. The conditions for the second half of the days walk were improved by the fact there was a footway along the road most of the way. I arrived in Annan and met Bob at the supermarket. We walked down the main street but had to do without ice cream as all the ice cream machines seemed to be out of order. I had a strawberry tart instead and ate it under the gaze of the statue of Robert the Bruce on the Town Hall.


The last section of the walk today was on the Annandale Way along the river Annan. The river has been running high and some fields still had evidence of small local flooded sections. Bob met me at a wood yard at the junction with the road I will take tomorrow.

An unmetrical version of Psalm 18

God is my rock, rock, rock
And my castle.
God us my strength, strength, strength
I trust God:
My body armour and the source of life in me,
God is my high tower.

There are many high towers in the local landscape which were used for defense.
They crop up in Celtic spirituality as an image of the strong presence of God, as defender and refuge.

God defend us from all trials and troubles this night,
Grant us a quiet night and a peaceful end.

JAL 18.06.2019
Day 66 of the End to End, Rigg to near Milnfield.

The Same Trousers

Day 65 of the End to End was an epic day. I made sure it got off to the right start by putting on my blue walking trousers. These are the same trousers I wore on the day Hannah walked into Scotland 7 years ago.
We were using her route to Gretna. Well in truth, non motorway traffic all has to use the same road, which runs alongside the M6. Indeed this was the closest I’d walked to the M6 in all the days I’ve followed the M6 corridor. Sometimes there was only a hole in the fence between me and the motorway.


This funnel into Scotland has one great effect: it concentrates the End to Enders into a narrow stream. Today I saw 3 other groups of End to Enders, all cyclists, my highest tally so far.


First there was Tim and Alan, Lejoggers from North Wales. Then there was Mel Nicholls and her team. This terrific paralympic athlete began a world record attempt a few days ago to Handcycle LEJOG in 9 days. Read about it here

https://melnicholls.co.uk/

Follow her @Dolly2racer
They passed me just before Metal Bridge, where we stopped for lunch, as we did the last time we came this way in 2012.


There was quite a cross wind on the next section and warnings for cyclists.


The third team of End to Enders were husband and wife cyclists, Colin and Sandra. Colin is 80 and they are going JOGLE. I met them just before Gretna as they headed for Carlisle.


Then it was celebration time at the border and a photo of me wearing the same trousers at the Welcome to Scotland sign.

There was time for ice cream and a bit of shopping at the Gretna outlet before I left Hannah’s 2012 route to go West towards Annan, getting to Rigg by day’s end.
Then a side visit to Bruce’s Cave on the way back to our campsite. By a small miracle it even had a resident spider. A sign? Maybe: persistence pays off when you are doing the End to End.

From 1 Thessalonians 5
Be happy! Pray at all times. Give thanks in all circumstances. Line up with God!

Not every End to End is a record,
But each one is a significant personal effort.
I pray tonight for
Tim and Alan, Colin and Sandra, and Mel Nicholls and her team, and all those other End to Enders I’ve not met yet.

God grant us all a quiet night and a peaceful end

JAL 17.06.3019
Harker Bridge to Rigg via Gretna.
PS thanks for all encouraging messages and comments: much appreciated.

Where two walks meet

In 2017 I walked from East to West, Newcastle to Carlisle, along the Hadrian’s Wall Path. Today my North to South route would cross that East to West route.
I began at the post box at Burthwaite. Some twitter followers asked about the Parish Council: St Cuthbert Without. Without what you wonder?
Well I don’t know, but Bede reported that Cuthbert’s followers had carried his body in his coffin around the North of England for 6 years before setting it down at Durham.
The morning’s walk was fine with no rain and I was not so encumbered. I was soon walking into Carlisle via Upperby, where they are building Story Homes. Maybe they are made of straw, wood or bricks depending on which little pig you choose.

I’ll huff and I’ll blow your house down’


In Carlisle city centre we stopped for ice cream before visiting the Cathedral. My South to North walk was crossing over my East to West one, as I visited the cathedral in 2017 when I was on the Hadrian’s Wall Path. We walked past the Carlisle City Hostel where we stayed and also Carlisle castle. At Britts Park I was briefly on the HWP again and crossed the river Eden to the point where the line of the Vallum crossed the A7. 

I was definitely heading North.


I walked into Hobby Craft to top up on scrapbook supplies (there are a series of scrapbooks that also illustrate the End to End) and then onto the final section of road around Kingstown retail park. This used to be an airfield.
Bob met me and we agreed to try a short section of disused railway path to get off the road for a bit. It wasn’t that long, and two other short bits of path one of which ended in a scramble up a bank, took me to Harper Bridge, over the M6, today’s end point.

River Eden at Carlisle 

From Psalm 46

There is a river and its streams make God’s city a glad place, the holy place where God is living.
God is right there in the centre of that place and shall not be moved but shall continually come to help that city all of the time.

God loves cities.
God wants them to thrive and be places of abundant life.
May the city constantly remember God and directed in God’s way be a fruitful place for all people.

God grant a quiet night and a peaceful end.

JAL 16.06.2019
Day 64 of the End to End, Burthwaite to Harper Bridge via Carlisle.

A straight road and a post box

After a gap of a week in which there has been a lot of rain, we took up the End to End again today. It was Day 63 and we were once again in Cumbria in the M6 corridor.
I started at the Cottage Wood Centre, a project of the Methodist Church where I spoke to one of the project workers. She told me the congregation had been down to 4 people before the project started and it’s now a thriving space for people of all ages.


The road went straight on and as a result the traffic goes rather fast much to the detriment of 3 hedgehogs. A notice suggested red squirrels deserved consideration. Unfortunately I didn’t see any. But I did see some donkeys and sheep, and All Saints Church, Calthwaite.


By lunchtime we’d made it to Southwaite services and so walked in through the back gate. It’s beginning to look a bit worn but the jam donuts were as good as ever.
The grass verges were a riot of foxgloves, buttercups, vetch and red campion alongside many different grasses. The season was certainly marching on.

A tiny few spots of rain after lunch but hardly worth putting my hood up for. The road carried straight on and I was soon striding into Burthwaite where the post box looked very familiar. Red of course, but also the same one Hannah had been photographed at in 2012.

From Proverbs 3

God will make your paths straight.

May we walk in God’s paths.
And may God grant us a quiet night and a peaceful end.

JAL 15.06.2019
Day 63 of the End to End, Brackenburgh to Braithwaite, Cumbria.

Still wet

Here in Derbyshire in the between days, it’s still wet. There’s a lot of fake news out there too. Some say there’s panic buying of gopher wood and animals have been seen queuing in pairs on the hard shoulder of the M1. Others say climate is being adversely affected by human activity but who could believe that?


I’ve been out and walked through some wet meadows. Wet grass tickling my legs, I’ve seen buttercups, vetch and clover all bowed down with jewel-like rain drops. I’ve seen foxgloves dripping and dog roses like tiny pools.


I’ve got wet. I slipped on a stile and have a magnificent bruise to show for it. I’ve been experiencing re-entry. This is the first training event I’ve conducted in six months. I can’t wait to get back to walking at the end of the week.

From Psalm 56

I have made vows to you, God;
I will present my thanks to you.
For you have delivered me from death
And kept my feet from stumbling,
that I may walk before you in the light of life.

The subtle grey light of a drizzly day,
The bright clear light of a blue sky day
The soft light of the evening star:
Each one gives us light and shows us a path.
You have delivered me to a place of flourishing.
You have shown me the grave and proved it empty.
What more can I do than praise you, for all of this is marvellous.

God grant a quiet night and a peaceful end.

JAL 12.06.2019
At The Hayes Conference Centre, Swanwick, while not walking the End to End.

Last Day of Section 2

Day 62 of the End to End is the final day’s walk in section 2 of LEJOG. It began at Eamont Bridge and I walked into Penrith. There was a very short footpath to the roundabout on the A6/A66. It was only a few yards and had a lot of nettles, some majestic foxgloves and a rather tricky stile.


Penrith provided some first class distractions: a Greggs for some early 11s and some interesting historical items in the churchyard. A stone cross and hog back tomb stone were both pre-Conquest in date. There was also a plague stone beside the A6: a place where money would be disinfected by vinegar when in medieval times there was a risk of plague.


The road out of Penrith was the longest hill of the day. I’m pretty sure it was mile 603 that had been sponsored by my friend Renee. The only distraction I could find here was a well worn fungus. There were some distant views of Blencathra and for most of the day we walked quite near to the M6.


I met Bob at Kitchen Hill bridge where we also noted the Kitchen Hill Monolith by a large tree near the West Coast Main Line.
We diverted to a garden centre for some cake, mindful that the rain was due and we’d still more than a mile to go.
However, we made it to the car at Brackenburgh just before the rain started. We drove back to junction 40 for a bit of shopping and then for our last evening at the Borrett barn, by Sedbergh.

From Psalm 4

When I lie down, I go to sleep in peace;
You alone, God, keep me safe.

The hill out of Penrith today seemed the longest one yet.
I look forward to a few days rest
Before we get to the next section of hills!

God grant us a quiet night and a peaceful end.

JAL 07.06.2019
Day 62 of the End to End, Eamont Bridge to Brackenburgh.

And God planted a garden in Eden

Day 61 of the End to End saw a significant improvement in the weather. I started walking at Little Strickland towards Great Strickland: the latter is a bit bigger than the former. Along the verge on the way into the village one resident had nurtured a lovely patch of wild flowers.


Beyond the village Bob and I set off on the first bridleway. Too confident for my own good, I sent him back as the track looked clear and easy to negotiate. A large puddle and a gate were just the first step to confusion. The track ended at the edge of a hay field. Poorly signed paths are not helpful to walker or land owner. The walker is left uncertain about the route and the landowner risks people walking where they otherwise would not.
I used my common sense, chose the edge of the field and eventually did reach a gate which had another sign on it. I went through it into the woodland but once again had to use common sense as the path was littered with broken tree trunks and branches and often difficult to negotiate. I kept the river on my left and tried to keep to the route that looked to have been used most.


I emerged into another meadow, crossed a footbridge and arrived in the small hamlet of Melkinthorpe. I decided to have a rest and happily found ice cream for sale at the beautiful Larch Cottage Nursery. The garden is colourful and has many attractive sheltered areas.


I met Bob on the next section of road and we had a picnic before taking the second off road section from Clifton Dykes to Brougham. Some of the path was alongside fields and some through woodland strips.


At Brougham we made a short visit to Brougham Hall, currently under restoration, where ice cream was also available.
From there we were on the approach to Eamont Bridge with plenty of time in hand. So we included some visits to the two nearby henges: Mayburgh henge and King Arthur’s Table, both Neolithic monuments.
From Eamont Bridge we decided to visit a few other places whilst the weather was good. At the Alpaca Centre the Alpacas and a donkey were very photogenic.
We drove to Haweswater Reservoir where many bluebells were still flowering by the waterside. It’s a lovely place and one we’d hope to revisit another time.


We completed the day with a celebration of 600 miles walked with fish and chips at the award winning Shap Chippy. Delicious!

And God planted a garden in Eden.
There was flowing water,
Trees and flowering plants;
And there were human beings in the garden.

It is wonderful to walk in Eden,
To enjoy the water, trees and flowering plants.
To wonder at the handiwork of the Maker,
As responsible stewards of the environment.

Tonight, on the 75th Anniversary of D-day,
I pray for a quiet night and a peaceful end.

JAL 06.06.2019
On Day 61 of the End to End, from Little Strickland to Eamont Bridge.

Just Walking

Day 60 of the End to End, which is half way through the proposed number of walking days, was as good a day as any for just walking. One of the things about getting to day 60 is the 59 days of just walking that I’ve done before today.


Although yesterday was forecast as wet weather, today had plenty of grey clouds and showers. The term Thunder Stone from the start of today’s walk refers to a very large stone, perhaps an erratic or maybe placed by neolithic forbears. We saw several both at the start and end of today’s walk. This part of Cumbria has many cairns, tumuli and stone circles although some require a fair dose of imagination to see them as circles at all.
On the first part of the walk the wind was quite gusty and showers rattled at my back. There were sporadic pieces of eroded limestone along the route (some of this part of the route coincided with the C2C). There are also shake holes marked on the map which are a result of limestone erosion.


Bob came back with the car and we had lunch by a quarry. I then had a short snooze in the car before carrying on for the last 4 miles of today’s walk to Little Strickland down what was essentially a fairly straight road. We finished at the small church of St Mary in the village.
After the walk we drove to Shap to see the small Keld Chapel. It dates from the 16th century and is now looked after by the National Trust. The large key hangs on the door of the house opposite and opens a wooden door to a simple building which still has no electricity.


On the way back from the chapel we stopped to see the Goggleby Stone, a large single stone in a nearby field, said to be part of the Shap Avenue Neolithic site.


We went onto Kendal to have a meal and long conversation with Ruth, an old friend. It was a good way to finish a day of just walking.

From Ruth 1

Wherever you go I will go.
Your people will be my people.
Your God will be my God.

Walking together, walking separately,
Walking each day, walking north.
Talking and eating together,
Sharing conversation and memories.
All in one day.

Tonight, God grant us a quiet night and a peaceful end.

JAL 05.06.2019
Day 60 of the End to End from Thunder Stone farm to Little Strickland.

An early start

Day 59 of the End to End began earlier than usual. We decided on an early start because the weather forecast for the day was for rain arriving from lunchtime onwards. With 8 miles to walk we got going at Carlingill bridge at 8 am, following the route Hannah took 7 years ago.
Near High Cargill farm an intriguing notice said that the site was being excavated as part of the Digging for Britons TV series. The route was, as mentioned yesterday, a Roman Road which we also followed for a large part of today. There was a site of a Roman fort nearby. But this other site was evidence of the Pre-Roman British inhabitants. I look forward to the programme.


At the Salterwath Bridge (the name indicates an old salt route) I took the path by the River Lune through woodland and farmland. I met Bob and we emerged onto the road at Lune Bridge. We had early 11s, at 9.30 am, near Roundthwaite. There were a few spots of rain on the road to Tebay services, along which there were some orchids flowering.


At Tebay services we stopped for the more usual 11s nearer 11 am and enjoyed a lovely Frittata snack. We also stocked up on some interesting items for dinner. The rain so far was short lived, much enjoyed by the multicoloured Tebay ducks. It looked like we’d make the last two miles before the heavy rain set in.
The remaining route consisted of 2 poorly marked bridleways. To get onto the first I had to undo two bits of orange string holding a gate shut. The knots were fiendish and I had to use my teeth. Bob came from the other road towards me across the fields as there was no way of knowing the line of the path. I just made a bee-line for a gate in a wall as straight as I could.


The second bridleway was longer and took me back onto the line of the Roman Road. Bob came with me for a while. We were in sheep country and the views were awesome. At Thunder Stone farm cattle grid we had our earliest finish so far. The rain soon came down and lasted the rest of the day. Needless to say, we stopped for ice cream at the Chocolate shop at Orton (and chocolate of course).

From Psalm 121

I look at the mountains;
where will my help come from?
My help will come from God the Maker,
Who will not let me fall and is always awake.

However many generations have passed this way,
The mountains and hills have always been there.
Our songs may be short but their songs last forever.
The paths may be temporary but God keeps watch.
For tonight I ask God for what I need:
A quiet night and a peaceful end.

JAL 04.06.2019
Day 59 of the End to End, Carlingill Bridge to Thunder Stone farm.

Slow day around Sedbergh

Day 58 of the End to End would officially be half way day, but it would include many distractions. I began at Killington New Bridge and was soon walking across fields to pick up the Dales Way. Bob met me and we walked to Brigflatt Quaker meeting house, which is very close to our current accommodation.


Brigflatt meeting house dates from 1675. It is the oldest meeting house in the North of England and the third oldest in the country. George Fox preached nearby and the Lake District has other notable early Quaker connections. We layer read that Fox had visited Borrett, in 1652, where we are now staying.
We crossed some more fields and walked into Sedbergh where we had some lunch. This included some ice cream. Bob then went back to Borrett for the car and I walked out of Sedbergh up Howgill Lane. Happily, Lockbank farm that made local ice cream is just along the lane and I was able to stop and sample a couple of flavours while enjoying the view.


The hedges along the lane meant it was quite sheltered. There were still quite a few bluebells out alongside cranesbill and lots of ferns. I passed the end of the lane to Bramaskew, the farm where the early Quakers used to meet before the Brigflatt meeting house was constructed.
Eventually I came to a well placed seat, and Bob drove up and agreed this could be the official half way seat. I have now walked half way to John O’Groats.
But half way is not all the way and so there were a few more miles to put in before the end of the day. Holy Trinity church, Howgill is another of the small places of Worship in the area.

The route was an old Roman Road and well supplied with sheep. We stopped just before Carlingill bridge. We came back via Lockbank Farm and got some ice cream to take with us.

From Psalm 23
The Lord is my Shepherd:
With God’s care I want for nothing.
In green pastures and by still waters,
I am restored.

Christ before me, Christ beside me,
Christ above me, Christ behind me,
Christ to comfort and restore me,
Christ in mouth of friend and stranger.

Giving thanks for the journey so far,
God grant a quiet night and a peaceful end.

JAL 03.06.2019
Day 58 of the End to End from Killington New Bridge to Carlingill bridge via Howgill Lane.