Mike, Mabel, (and Christy) visit more Mabie Monicas, and a Marylin

5.04 miles 2h 2m ascent

Hillhead Hill, Woodhead Hill

That’s the Mabie Monicas done….ish.

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Larch Hill: Wee Monica 2

3.26 miles 1h 21m ascent 175m

That’s Larch Hill

Larch Hill from the Yellow Trail

“The planted larch trees are burnished gold.
What a wondrous forest they have become.”

Tomonari

Wee Monica: definition – a hill whose name appears on the OS 1:25K but not the 1:50K.

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Mabie’s Monicas: third and fourth

4.2 miles 1h 54m ascent 232m

Craigbill Hill ahead

Craigbill Hill, Auchenfad Hill

A Monica: a hill with its name on the OS 1:50k. A Wee Monica is named on the 1:25k, but not the 1:50K. Not every hill has a marked spot height, so I have chosen to include any hills whose highest contour is in the area bounded by the Forestry boundary. There are six Mabie Monicas, but two of those have their summits just outside the boundary, but within a biscuit-toss. Of the four Wee Monicas, one has a top outside the boundary. I’m not sure if it a biscuit-toss away, but a pebble-toss, yes.

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Marthrown Hill: revisited (twice)

4.8 miles 2h 12m ascent 273m

Marthrown Hill

I would be an exaggeration to say Marthrown Hill has been a thorn in my side but it has been a bit of a prickle. Walking around it these last few weeks brought that price to the fore. It had foiled my attempts to uncover its etymology and nine years ago, with a spaniel and a border terrier I failed to reach its lowly top. The terrain, particularly some new fell, was too much for us.

I decided that this time I would have to do it without the dogs. Christy might manage but I doubted Mabel could. I had several possible routes in mind but remained undecided. Since I had two dogs with me (though not the same two as nine years ago), this was just going to be a recce. I would see which direction looked most appealing.

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Nine Standards: an Eden Way addendum

4.84 miles 3h 27m ascent 211m boot-wetness: extreme

Nateby Common-Nine Standards Rigg circular

This was day 3 of our Kirkby Stephen walks, and following the previous day’s exhausting outing, called for a straightforward route that wasn’t too demanding. Indeed, since it was to be a short walk we decided not to take lunch. We could eat in comfort after the walk. Can you hear the distant maniacal laughter?

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Eden Way: 11 – Eden Springs, the source

6.69 miles 5h 3m ascent 332m

Aisgill Moor-Eden Springs circular

Between two sister moorland rills
There is a spot that seems to lie
Sacred to flow’rets of the hills,
And sacred to the sky.

We had slightly damp boots but the weather was decent. It was neither a particularly long walk, nor much of a climb but… Du lieber Gott! … it was a grind. I slept for 12 hours that night. That said, I think it was my favourite section of the Eden Way. There is something atmospheric about a wild moorland walk.

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Eden Way: 10.2 – where the River Eden begins

6.30 miles 3h 53m ascent 247m

Thrang-Hellgill Bridge circular

And still of a winter’s night, they say, when the wind is in the trees,
When the moon is a ghostly galleon tossed upon cloudy seas,
When the road is a ribbon of moonlight over the purple moor,
A highwayman comes riding—riding—riding—
A highwayman comes riding, up to the old inn-door.

Over the cobbles he clatters and clangs in the dark inn-yard.
He taps with his whip on the shutters, but all is locked and barred.
He whistles a tune to the window, and who should be waiting there
But the landlord’s black-eyed daughter, Bess, the landlord’s daughter,
Plaiting a dark red love-knot into her long black hair.

The Highwayman. Alfred Noyes

The Eden Way guide offers two routes from Thrang to Hell Gill Bridge, one is closer to the river but more rustic, and one further from the river but on a better path and passing the Watercut Eden Benchmark. I had always intended walking both of these routes but probably as part of separate walks, but a last minute hiccough left us with only one car and a need for a shorter walk. Making these two routes into a circular walk allowed us to go ahead. This took us by origin of the River Eden as a named waterway, as well as the final, and most impressive, benchmark sculpture. I had not realised we would have to ford Hell Gill above its waterfall but that just added to the experience.

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Eden Way: 9 – The Search for Passage

10.85 miles 5h 48m ascent 227m
– Eden Way: 9.47 miles 4h 50m ascent 201m
– Poetry Path, 1.38 miles 58m ascent 26m

River Eden at Sandford
The Eden at Sandford

Sandford-Kirkby Stephen-Stenkrith

This section of the Eden Way took us from Sandford Bridge to Stenkrith Park in Kirkby Stephen. It has pleasant riverside paths through fields and woodland, short sections through farmland and pavements through Kirkby Stephen. There are couple of miles of road-walking on quiet country roads. But it was not a vanilla hike. Overgrown paths saw us stung by nettles and snatched by brambles; there were stiles to try the patience of a saint; the odd navigation lapse kept us on our toes; and finding the section’s Eden Benchmark proved challenging. But the weather was good and we had the Kirkby Stephen Poetry Trail as a dessert.

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