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Guidebook to the Coast to Coast long-distance walking route from St Bees Head in Cumbria to Robin Hood's Bay in Yorkshire. At 190 miles (300km), this popular long-distance route can be walked in 2 weeks. With clear route description, maps, trek planner and accommodation guide. A separate 1:25,000 map booklet is included with the guidebook.
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A guidebook to walking the Coast to Coast Path National Trail, originally conceived by Alfred Wainwright. Suited to experienced walkers, the 302km (188 mile) C2C passes through the Lake District, Yorkshire Dales and North York Moors to link St Bees on the west coast with Robin Hood’s Bay on the east.
The route is described from west to east, with a summary for hikers travelling in the opposite direction. It is presented in 13 stages of between 17 and 33km – perfect for a fortnight’s holiday – although longer itineraries are also suggested.
Map key
Overview map
Trek planner
Route summary table
Preface to the fourth edition
Introduction
An unmissable experience
Planning your walk
Suggested itineraries
When to go
Getting there and back
Public transport along the route
First and last nights
Accommodation
Facilities en route
Baggage transfer
Cash management
What to take
Planning day by day
Using this guide
Maps
Weather
Waymarking and paths
Emergencies
Phones and Wi-Fi
Language
All about the region
Geography and geology
Wildlife and plants
History and pre-history
The Coast to Coast Walk
Across Lakeland
Stage 1 St Bees to Ennerdale Bridge
Stage 2 Ennerdale Bridge to Borrowdale
Stage 3 Borrowdale to Patterdale
Stage 4 Patterdale to Shap
Into the Dales
Stage 5 Shap to Kirkby Stephen
Stage 6 Kirkby Stephen to Keld
Stage 7A Keld to Reeth (high-level route)
Stage 7B Keld to Reeth (low-level route)
Stage 8 Reeth to Richmond
Stage 9 Richmond to Danby Wiske
Stage 10 Danby Wiske to Osmotherley
The North York Moors
Stage 11 Osmotherley to Blakey Ridge
Stage 12 Blakey Ridge to Grosmont
Stage 13 Grosmont to Robin Hood’s Bay
Appendix A Useful contacts
Appendix B Accommodation along the route
Appendix C Further reading
March 2024
The short stretch of the C2C, west of Dent, where it passes through Black How Farm, is closed (March 2024) because of the condition of some of the farm buildings. The way around this is to take the public footpath via Row Farm to join the minor road. There, turn left to rejoin the original line opposite Black How Farm. The closure should not be permanent, but will remain in place for some time.
March 2023
Between Gunnerside and Reeth, the low-level alternative that ran alongside the River Swale has been modified by moving it to a new line that keeps to higher ground on the north side of the Swale, re-joining the original riverside route at Healaugh.
The new variant avoids a short stretch of road walking, along with issues of flooding or muddy progress after prolonged wet weather that occasionally affected the riverside route.
The new variant will become part of the Coast-to-Coast Path National Trail and will be detailed in the next edition of the Cicerone guide.
November 2019
August 2019
Keld accommodation:
Mark and Jude Waterton
Greenlands B&B Keld
Angram Lane, Keld, Richmond, North Yorkshire, DL11 6DY
Tel: 01748 886532
Email:greenlandskeld@swale.life
Web site: www.greenlandskeld.co.uk
O.S. Map Ref: 54.395348, -2.173482
p95 and 96
DELETE from ‘Do not cross Rosgill Bridge…’ to the info panel about Shap Abbey.
SUBSTITUTE with the following:
Do not cross Rosgill Bridge, but turn right onto a broad farm track, with the River Lowther off to the left. A short way on, turn onto the track leading up to farm buildings, but immediately go left (do not climb the farm track) on a narrow path beside a wall to a stepped and gated stile in a wall corner. Moving on, roughly parallel to a continuing wall and then a fence across a pasture to pass an area of low crags known as Fairy Crags. Keeping ahead, a few more minutes brings the route to a gate and a delectable corner where Parish Crag Bridge spans Swindale Beck, a tributary of the River Lowther.
Climb steps above the bridge, and then strike directly across the ensuing field to a group of ruined farm buildings on the skyline. Pass through the enclosure there, and after a gate bear right to meet a minor road at a bend.
Head up the road for about 200m, and turn left through a gate at a signpost. Cross boggy ground to a gate, and through this cross an ancient earthwork in the form of a water-filled ditch and mound. Now take to an indistinct green path towards a wall. As the wall bears right, follow it briefly, but then pull half-left, crossing the shoulder of a sloping pasture dotted with several small granite erratic boulders. On the brow of the pasture, Shap Abbey appears to the right, not immediately obvious among its ring of trees. Drop to cross a stream and keep on to reach and pass through a wall gap high above the River Lowther.
Through the gap, bear right and soon strike across a sloping pasture, aiming for the abbey. On approaching the abbey, take to a narrow path (not easily located) that crosses a slight hollow above the river, and climb to a gate in a wall. Through the gate, the route bears left, away from the abbey, to cross Abbey Bridge into a small car park, and then goes forward along an access road to climb out of the river valley.
p174
DELETE para beginning ‘As the lane bends right…’, and SUBSTITUTE:
As the lane bends right, go forward on the village lane, and continue to a signpost (on the right) indicating a turning (left) at The Barn. Keep ahead to a field gate. Go along the edge of a pasture but leave it before a fence at the end of the second pasture by bearing left and shortly right towards St Giles Farm.
Penultimate para. DELETE from ‘On reaching the farm…’ to the bottom of the page.
SUBSTITUTE:
On reaching the farm, pass through a gate and go forward past the farm buildings onto a gravel track. As this swings to the right, leave it and descend very steeply, left, beside a fence to the banks of the Swale. Pass beneath the A1(M), and from a kissing-gate on the other side go forward towards a defunct railway bridge. Pass beneath this too, and on the other side circle right at the edge of the racecourse overflow parking area and use steps to climb up to the railway trackbed. Cross the bridge, and then descend steeps to gain a surfaced track that leads forward to the A6055, joining it at Catterick Bridge.
p175
DELETE last two paras.
SUBSTITUTE:
Cross the road with care to a gated squeeze stile giving access to a meadow. Follow the Swale until after passing through an elongated pasture the route is diverted up to meet the B6271. Turn right beside it, walking for about 40m, and then entering a car park for the Scorton Walk. Immediately, turn left through a gate onto a permissive path that parallels the B-road until it joins a right-of-way path at a pair of gates. Now keep forward to arrive at a surfaced track. Follow this southward and take the first turning on the left (Flat Lane), which leads you out to the B6271 at Bolton-on-Swale.
p226
DELETE from para beginning ‘On reaching May Beck Bridge…to (2 paras later) 700m to a stile on the left (signposted ‘C-to-C’).
SUBSTITUTE
On reaching May Beck Bridge, go immediately left on the road, doubling back and following the rising road to, and beyond, a bend at New May Beck farm. As the road straightens, leave it, right, at a broad footpath that heads out onto Sneaton Low Moor. Ignore the prominent path bearing left onto the moor. Instead, from a signpost, head initially half-right through rushes onto a path that leads to a mid-moor signpost, and then on farther to a gate in a wall, close by a scattered stand of pine. Through the gate, turn left for Hawsker (note the interesting milestone nearby, right), and parallel the wall on a path at times board-walked.
At a field corner near the B1416, turn right to a gate access onto the B-road. Cross the road to a stile opposite.
Page 66
Stage 2
'The ongoing route from Black Sail hostel to the foot of Loft Beck can be confusing in mist. Avoid the more pronounced path that descends to the bridge spanning Liza Beck, and, instead, look for a higher path striking east that leads to the foot of Loft Beck.' Correct Map route see Map booklet 926 for detailed route.
Page 155
Stage 7b
Keld route, the text is correct, but the map on page 156 is incorrect until you reach Rampsholme Bridge. see map booklet 926 for detailed route in blue.
Lancashire-born writer and photographer Dr Terry Marsh specialises in the outdoors and travel. He is the author or revision author/editor of over 100 guidebooks, including the award-winning Cicerone guides to the Coast to Coast Walk (first published in 1993), The Shropshire Way (1999) and Great Mountain Days in the Pennines (2013). Terry has a PhD in Historical Geography and is a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society (FRGS). He is a fellow of the Royal Geographical Society (FRGS), a Life Member of the Outdoor Writers and Photographers Guild and Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland (FSA (Scot)).
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