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Understand

Prepare

Get in

Go/Walk/Drive/...

Stay safe

Go next

This itinerary to Coast To Coast Walk is an outline and needs more content. It has a template, but there is not enough information present. Please plunge forward and help it grow!
This article is an itinerary.
Start of Coast to Coast walk

Understand

The Coast To Coast Walk (properly "A Coast To Coast Walk") is a 190-mile long-distance walking trail in England which crosses the North of England from St Bees in Cumbria on the West coast to Robin Hood's Bay in North Yorkshire on the East coast.

The walk was created in 1972 by Alfred Wainwright, when, in response to the creation of the Pennine Way, he set about devising the best walk he could imagine in England. It has never been adopted as an official National Trail, though a campaign has begun, but is hugely popular and came second (after the Milford Track) in a recent poll among travel writers conducted by Country Walking magazine to find the finest walk in the world.

Along its route the walk passes through three National Parks: The Lake District, the Yorkshire Dales, and the North York Moors. The creator suggested walking from West to East in order to enjoy the best possible views, and to have any prevailing weather at your back rather than in your face.

The original guidebook was written in Wainwright's characteristic style of hand-written text and hand-drawn maps, in the same manner as his seminal Pictorial Guides to the Lakeland Fells.

Prepare

Walk location

The walk typically takes people two weeks to complete. You'll want a copy of the guidebook, maps, and suitable outdoor gear. The walk crosses through the mountains of the Lake District but generally keeps to the passes, apart from the occasional option to cross summits.

Walkers may split the walk in various ways to suit the distance they want to walk in a day, though the availability of accommodation may limit this. The author suggested breaking the walk into twelve days, which makes about 16 miles a day. Some find this a little too much for comfort and choose to have the odd rest day or a couple of short days, or even to take other transport as substitution for a day or two.

Get in

St Bees railway station with sign

To St Bees.

Train

St Bees has a station on the Cumbrian Coast rail line. From the West Coast Main Line, change at Carlisle or Lancaster off the west Coast main line, or at Barrow-in-Furness. There are currently (2013) 21 stopping passenger trains a day. The station is on the Main Street in the centre of the village, where there are three pubs within 5 minutes' walking. It is a 20-minute walk to the official start of the Coast to Coast walk at the main beach.

Car

Leave the M6 at junction 40 (Penrith) and head west along the A66 to Cockermouth, then south along the A5086 to Egremont. St Bees is a couple of miles to the west and will be signposted.

Walk

Route of the walk

The walk starts at the seawall at the main beach in St Bees; there is a monument to mark this with an interpretation board. The scenery throughout is beautiful, but also varied, since you pass through a number of different types of landscapes. The start is a coastal walk, with cliffs, seabirds, and a lighthouse. Soon after heading inland you pass through the Lake District, which has a great variety of landscapes in itself. The northern part of the Yorkshire Dales is limestone country, then the Vale of Mowbray is lower-level terrain. The North York Moors are peaty moorlands, and finally you reach the sea once more at Robin Hood's Bay among the highest cliffs in England.

Eat

For many days of the walk, there will be no pubs or kiosks during the length of the day's walk; avail yourself of a packed lunch.

Drink

The Falling Foss tea garden[1] has tea and a playground for children.

Sleep

Your main options are Bed & Breakfast (with occasional Youth Hostel options) or camping (including a Mongolian yurt at one point). Some accommodation guides for the walk have been produced over the years.

Cope

An option to lighten the load is a daily baggage transfer service, such as Sherpa Van[2], who will take your luggage to the next day's finish point for around £6 per bag.

Stay safe

Your main risks are being miserable when it rains, and getting blisters. Having the right walking gear is important.

Go next

There are several other long distance walks in the United Kingdom.

  • The Pennine Way is a 268 mile walk in northern England.
  • Southern Upland Way is a 212 mile coast to coast walk in southern Scotland.
  • The Great Glen Way is a 73 mile walking and cycling route from coast to coast in northern Scotland.


This itinerary to Coast To Coast Walk is an outline and needs more content. It has a template, but there is not enough information present. Please plunge forward and help it grow!