Tag: Bincombe

Humbled – but fitter

Humbled – but fitter

Maiden Castle, with sheep for company

Three more training walks since my last post, together with daily exercises to stretch and strengthen the legs. It would be tremendous just to set off on a long distance trail with no prior training, relying on being ‘naturally fit’, as Peter Sellers was fond of describing himself – before sadly dying following a heart attack at the age of 54. Now at the ripe old age of 65, I have to acknowledge that the time bell has taken its toll and that, if I’m to stand any chance of walking 1,279 miles from Land’s End to John o’Groats, I need to work at my fitness. And at managing the Achilles tendinitis.

The first of the three was a mere 11-miler, but with four serious climbs out of Lulworth on the way back to Weymouth. Knowing that my leg muscles were some way short of their usual strength, I was quite pleased with the way they coped with the ascents, although admittedly I did stop for a cereal bar three-quarters of the way up the fourth one. It turned out to be a pleasantly sociable walk because, besides the usual amiable exchanges with fellow walkers along the way, my second son Barnaby and his family arrived from Sheffield and met with my current brood at The Smugglers Inn in Osmington Mills. Thanks to the wonders of smartphones, they all arrived at the same time and joined me just after I’d swallowed a restorative coffee at the pub. We all sat outside in the unseasonably balmy sunshine, catching up on the children’s respective achievements and progress, although I have to say that being called ‘grandad’ takes a bit of getting used to – I still look over my shoulder, wondering who they’re talking to.

The second walk was, initially and at the end, in the company of Liz and Calum, both of whom need to improve their walking stamina in preparation for joining me for the West Highland Way at the end of July. We set off for a repeat of the Smitten Corner/Abbotsbury walk, but this time I inserted a three-mile loop in the middle to make mine an 18-miler. After we’d separated, I was joined for an hour by a very amiable farm dog that obviously likes company on her walkies, and wants to go farther than her owners are prepared to take her. I called her Topsy. I was approaching the ridge above Abbotsbury at an angle, still with Topsy in tow, when I saw a group of a dozen or so hikers striding out along the ridge. I was slightly puzzled, because they were moving faster than I’d ever seen a group of Ramblers Association members walking before, to the extent that it took me half a mile to catch up with them. By that time Topsy had taken up with a small family heading the other way, taking her closer to her home at Top Parts. The hardy hikers told me they were a group of Long Distance Walkers Association members from South Wales and that they were on a 54-mile circular hike from Weymouth. I took my hat off to them – that certainly put my modest 18-miler into perspective! I told them of my plans for LEJOG next month, to which one responded that I was taking the right approach by doing training walks. Wishing them luck, I forged ahead, because I didn’t want to keep Liz and Calum waiting too long in Abbotsbury.

Down off the ridge at East Bexington and along the road behind Chesil beach, the going was tougher than usual due to a stiff easterly breeze. I reassured anyone who’d listen that, if the prevailing wind’s in the east after March, we’re likely to get another good summer. After a coffee at the cabin, I met up with Liz and Calum and we set about tackling White Hill. Both Liz and I had found it testing a fortnight earlier but, a sign that we’re both getting stronger, we both toiled up it without a pause. Calum was fine with it, but he and his mum are both yet to start carrying full backpacks on their practice walks. I was weary by the end, but doing the warm-down exercises recommended by the sports masseur meant that neither Liz nor I had to endure stiffness the following day.

Next came a consolidating 18½-miler from home to Dorchester via Bincombe, with a stop for coffee at the Trumpet Major and return via Maiden Castle, Friar Waddon and Nottington. Liz set out with me, undecided at that point whether she’d do the full distance, take a shorter route or even a bus back. In the end she did the whole thing but really struggled for the last four miles or so, giving her an idea of the work she has still to do; the longest day on the WHW will be the same sort of distance, but with more ascent. I found the walk easier, but my Achilles was painful for a couple of days after, which is a little concerning. I’m now left with three tough walks, followed by two sets of two walks on consecutive days; these last ones will be the most interesting to see how my heel behaves on the second day. I found the setback a little disheartening, particularly as I’d thought the heel much improved the previous week. Still – whatever it takes, I’ll do it!

Oh, and one other minor problem. I have a vulnerable toe that I’ve managed to break a few times. I accept that the first time was my own fault; we were staying in a caravan on holiday near Les Sables d’Olonne in France, when I reprimanded the boys and told them to tidy their room, attempting to usher Alex through the door with a salutary barefoot kick up the backside, only for my foot to meet the door jamb first. “Serves you right!” said Liz. Ever since then the toe cracks and turns black at the slip of a heel, and that’s what happened on the stairs on Tuesday during my exercises. It’s not terribly troublesome and doesn’t affect my walking much, but it’s something I could have done without at this stage of my preparations. All of life’s a test of your mettle, I suppose, or in my case, of my brittle bones.

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SWCP – Fear and Trepidation

I was 61 when I finally walked the Pennine Way in 2015, two and a half years ago. I spent yesterday on the Viewranger website calculating the length and height gain for each stage of my attempt on the South West Coast Path from Land’s End to Lyme Regis this year and, to my consternation, found that, in terms of distance and ascent, it’s more challenging than the Pennine Way. Admittedly it doesn’t have the altitude and the corresponding cooler temperatures, nor does it have the hill fog, the amount of rainfall nor, thankfully, does it have miles of boggy moorland. It does, potentially at least, have numerous ferry and tidal creek crossings, sea mist, south-westerly gales, precipitous cliffs and slippery rocks to clamber over instead, plus the self-inflicted extra burden of carrying camping gear. Here’s the barebones comparison:

Pennine Way

Length: 268 miles (431 Km)

Ascent: 38,150 feet (11,934 metres)

Duration: 17 days

Daily average: 15.75 miles, 2,300 feet

Pack weight average: 22lbs (10Kg)

South West Coast Path (Land’s End to Lyme Regis)

Length: 289 miles (465 Km)

Ascent: 50,782 feet (15,478 metres)

Duration: 18 days

Daily average: 16 miles, 2,821 feet

Pack weight estimated: 28lbs (12.7Kg)

So, three years older, attempting to walk farther, climb more and carry greater weight – is this wise? Am I not old enough to know better? The next step is to do a trial hike with the sort of weight I envisage carrying in summer and to test-drive the new rucksack, complete with my modifications.

dav

So there you have it – the Bergans Helium 55, plus:

  • a Quechua drink holster on one shoulder strap
  • a pouch on the other shoulder strap for phone, power bank, mp3 player, charger etc
  • a waterproof Quechua bag on the waist strap for spectacles, torch, compass, bank card, peanuts, cereal bar etc
  • badly stitched homemade straps for attaching a wet tent on dry days

– all designed to enable me to keep up my walking rhythm without frequent stops; to that end I’ll also be using a 1.5 litre Camelbak bladder. For the Pennine Way I used, instead of bags and pouches, the multiple pockets of a gilet but, firstly, the rucksack straps get in the way of the pockets most irritatingly and, even though it’s made of fairly lightweight cotton, it can still be a layer too many in hot summer weather.

I’ve also made straps to attach the sleeping mat across the top but, because I don’t believe the rucksack is totally waterproof, I’ve added a nylon cover which won’t fit over such broad external items. In wet weather the tent will be stowed inside, separated from the rest of my kit by the polythene bag in which it was delivered but with the venitlation holes sellotaped. 55 litres provides ample space for everything, including the contents of side pockets and pouch for added protection from the weather if necessary.

The compression ties are drawn across the front rather than the sides to allow me to stash my waterproof jacket there. There’s a convenient strap under the lid through which I can hang the drawcord of my Charter hat when I need to raise my hood against wind and rain.

Trial Hike

All set, then, for a 12-miler up to and over Bincombe Bumps, along the Ridgeway and down to Osmington Mills for refreshment at the Smuggler’s Arms before heading back along the coast, a walk I must have done over a dozen times. But never with 28 lbs (12.7 Kg) on my back before. How will my knees fare? How will my feet shape up? Will the whole experience prove to be so unpleasant that I have to rethink radically my approach both to the SWCP and LEJOG and ditch the camping kit? I’ve been reading accounts of LEJOG by people like John Hillaby and Mark Moxon and am under no illusion about the scale of my project, the viability of which is, right now, in the balance. My usual bullish (bull-headed?) determination is well and truly on hold – I really don’t know whether or not I’m being over-ambitious at my age. This trial, which I’m approaching with trepidation, will go a long way towards making up my mind. No pressure, then.

I’ve already started work on my feet, giving them a daily soak in methylated spirits. Mark Moxon suffered badly from blisters in spite of using white spirit on his feet prior to his 1,111 mile walk, who knows why? Maybe he did his practice walks with insufficient weight on his back so that his feet were a different shape when he set out for real. Perhaps having boots with a Gore-Tex lining and two pairs of socks produces ideal, anaerobic conditions for making the feet sweat, thereby softening the skin. All I know is that, after using meths before doing the Pennine Way I only had one small blister, and that after I really pushed the pace en route to Haworth in a race against the weather. It may be that, had I not used meths, I may have had no problems anyway but, with less than four months to go, I’m not about to experiment by omitting what is, admittedly, at the level of a superstitious ritual.

Well, that’s it, job done, trial walk completed. On a cool, breezy but bright February morning I set off in full hiking regalia. The pack weight made itself felt on the first serious incline, leaving me more out of breath at the top than I’d expect to be. I’d tucked the waterproof cover in between the rucksack and the harness adjustment pad, but this pressed against my back so I moved it to sit under the lid. The waist belt was a little low, but a tweak of the ‘Quick Adjust Pro’ feature put that right. The drink bottle and pouch both hang a little high on the shoulder straps, but not obtrusively so. Having customised a lightweight, 1Kg backpack to suit my way of walking, it now weighs in at not much more than 1.4Kg with all my added bells and whistles and is both comfortable and practical.

I forgot to take my Trekrite walking stick with me because I don’t usually use one, hence my tendency to leave them behind, propped against stiles or suspended from bunkbeds, when on my travels. At Osmington I met a charming lady carrying walking poles who did her best to commend their use to me and recruit me to the Nordic walking fraternity. In pacific, placatory mode I said I was sure they were very good for her knees, agreeing that they were useful for leaping over puddles and fending off dogs or skittish kine, aware that expressing my true views would likely spark a lengthy debate, when what I wanted to do was make progress towards to my intended caffeine break at the Smugglers.

On the homeward stretch I felt a couple of hot spots developing on my feet. They weren’t surface blisters but ones starting to swell beneath existing hard skin. They were still slightly sore the following morning, but that’s precisely the sort of thing that I need to toughen up over the coming months. As for the leg muscles, I was delighted; I’d taken the steep route up to the tumuli above Bincombe and had hauled myself over the mounds in both directions just to increase the amount of ascent and finished the walk still with fuel in the tank. There were twinges of fatigue the next day, not amounting to stiffness nor anything that would have prevented me from walking again. In conclusion, I should be able to manage a pack with camping gear and, if I manage to lose a little weight myself and shave some off my food rations I might even add the lightweight inflatable mattress to my load.

I’ll walk again tomorrow to continue the toughening process, maybe 15 miles this time, but trying to avoid the slight error I made in 2015, in my enthusiasm, by peaking too early for the Pennine Way, after which it became slightly tedious to maintain the level of fitness. Next up – testing the camping gear.

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