I had trouble getting motivated
for this one this week – Super wife and I were still up printing maps and having
baths until about midnight the night before; I was still sore from the weights
sessions and smaller evening walks during the week and the call of London
Irish’s St Patricks Day game the next day was overwhelming. But dodging this
week’s long walk simply wasn’t an option – I’ve only got about another 14
weekends before I leave to really press on with my fitness and foot
conditioning, and I promised Super Wife that next weekend I would stay at home
as it is Mothers Day. So having collapsed into my bed around midnight I was up
again to the sound of my mobile phone alarm at 4:15am. Having talcum powdered
the living hell out of my already blistered feet and smeared the obligatory
copious amount of Vaseline on the inner thighs – which I can’t stand to do – and
having sunk about a pint of water and devoured a bowl of porridge – I was off
into the chilly darkness of the early morning, an ambling silhouette against
the streetlights as I waved goodbye to Super Wife, who was clearly desperate to
get back to sleep before our tiny dictator awoke in the nursery the next room
over.
Armed with maps of a different
route, a camera and a phone in one coat pocket, together with a large bottle of
water in the other; and wearing two t-shirts, a jumper, a coat and a beanie hat
against the frosty morning elements, I walked down Luton Road, past the new
Market Cross pub, over the road before the new Duck Bridge, up Station Road and
onto the footpath that runs along the bottom of Blows Downs.
Why new maps and a
different route? Well, I had someone ask me the other day whether the walks
posted on the blog are the only walks I do; of course they’re not – but there
would be very little interest in this blog if I just wrote about doing the same
walks over and over again, or kept describing my trundles up and down the
busway footpath. So what I try to do is to make the longer weekend walks more
interesting by deliberately plotting my route in new directions and through new
villages. There is obviously a bit of repetition because I’m largely starting
and finishing in the same place – but hopefully these posts aren’t becoming too
repetitive!
As I walked along the base of
Blows Downs in the direction of Half Moon Lane, I realised that I could hear
two males voices chattering away and as I got closer to the big park to my
right at Downs Road I could see tufts of white cigarette smoke rising from two
silhouettes, who at 5:15am were sat on the boundary fence of the park. As I got
closer it was apparent that these two dapper lads were still in the Italian
designer shoes and sharp shirts from the previous night on the town – less walk
of shame and more the night that never ends I thought as I silently past them
on the footpath with only a few trees between us.
The moon shone brightly through
the clouds and so the path was easy to follow, and despite the heavy rain for
an hour or so the night before, the ground was largely firm and the going good.
I followed the path as far as Downside Lower School on Oakwood Avenue, which
was the first school I ever went to, albeit for only a year. I strolled through
Downside with not another soul around and only a few lights on in the houses
and flats as I past them, no movement anywhere, down Graham Road to Southwood
Road and past the block of flats that I lived in until I was six - although it looks as though they've been done up a bit since then!
From there it was up to the A5,
the new hotel and the construction site for the expansion of Downside, before
turning up Beech Road, past the houses of Lowther Road and up the pathless
winding tarmac to the edge of Kensworth Quarry.
The quarry was completely unknown to me until a few weeks ago. That level of obliviousness now seemed
ridiculous as I realised that I have driven along the road I was walking down now many times before and this
behemoth crater torn into the landscape was so obviously visible through the
thin tree-line!
I followed the track down to the
junction at the edge of Church End and then up Spratts Lane to the footpath
across the fields towards Common Road. Having walked about 4 and a bit miles, I
thought that this was as good a time as any to tweet the fact that I was out
and about – I was mindful of the fact that it was a Saturday morning and that
anyone kind enough to actually be following this walk on Twitter or Facebook
might not actually be too pleased by their mobile phone notification sounding
off too early! In terms of the walking itself, truth be told, I had only just
really woken up, the aches had only just worked themselves out at this point
and I was actually starting to feel quite fresh.
I emerged onto Common Road in
Kensworth, crossing immediately over the road and onto a footpath that ran down
a rather pretty driveway then dove into some trees to the right at a point
where the signage made you very aware that you were no longer welcome on the
said driveway and that you better shift your arse onto the tiny dirt track
along the fence line at the back of the estate houses or else! The path was
actually very pretty in the golden glow of the morning light until I had to
start to hurdle the debris that is so often found close to the back fences of
housing estates – the broken fridge – the smashed up interior door – the rusty
bike frame – the small pile of ash surrounded by beer cans and lads mags – this
morning I was definitely on the scenic route.
That path came out onto Dovehouse
Lane, which passes Shortgrove Manor Farm, where I inadvertently managed to
scare an entire flock of sheep that had been right next to the fence of a field
to high heaven, causing them to retreat several metres back at pace, by
unconsciously reciting the words to Gangsters Paradise by Coolio featuring L.V. at volume
between swigs of water. Why Coolio so early on a Saturday morning? We’ll never
know.
I crossed Buckwood Lane and
climbed the footpath that runs along the back of the gardens of the large and
impressive houses of Holywell, yet another hidden gem of a village hidden
amongst the countryside, or certainly not seen often by those who live 5 miles
down the road without a car. The sun was starting to shine quite brightly by
this time bringing out all the glorious colours of spring and although I knew
it was still quite chilly, because I was shifting along at quite a pace,
wrapped in various layers of clothing, I actually started to feel quite warm.
So off came the beanie hat despite the fact that I knew that half my hair was
standing straight up in the air like the hobo version of Mr Majeika!
From there it was across more
fields, along the edge of some woodland, over Dunstable Road, through yet more
fields past the outskirts of Studham and then onto Church Road near Manor Farm.
I followed Valley Road downhill
until I reached the edge of a field at the bottom with a waymark post pointing
diagonally across it. As I had trundled down the tarmac I noticed a man out
washing his car who had paused to watch me thunder past, the sound of boots
thwacking against the road. He nodded, said good morning and gave me a strange
smirk, at which point I realised I had been doing it again... this time the
Oasis classic Live Forever – volume – moderate. Slightly embarrassed, and not a
little red, I said good morning and continued on... with haste.
The footpath diagonally across
this field was not in fact a footpath, it was a bridleway, and as I am fast
discovering, I am not the biggest fan of bridleways. Littered with stones and
rock and extremely uneven, they play havoc with my bruised and blistered feet. Not
for the squeamish but I can tell you that even with a pair of thick soled boots
on, if you tread on a bit of brick or stone with any force, it will cause your
blister to pop dramatically causing you not a small amount of pain and a painful
mile or so thereafter.
The weather was glorious – sunny
and warm – and having followed the bridleway I was led towards Ravensdell Wood,
before descending steeply downhill through Milebarn and the Hemel Hempstead
Road.
Once over the road the path took
me up a sustained steep uphill along a tractor track until I reached some
lovely old houses on my left at Hudnall. This was the first point on the walk
where I had been completely overheated and out of breath, and I’m not too proud
to admit that I had to momentarily pause to catch my breath before making it up
to the brow of the hill.
I guzzled down a fair bit of
water before plodding on towards an isolated old tree at the edge of a planted
field which the path turned west across. At first the path wasn’t at all
evident but once I had past the tree itself you could see the compressed earth
of the path in the bright sunshine now beating down fiercely at my back.
The path took me into Little
Gaddesen, past a beautiful church standing alone out in the middle of these
fields.
Strangely, the stiles and waymark posts of the footpath took me across
a little lane leading to the church and then into what I would have sworn was
someone’s garden, but what transpired to be some quaint little paddock that
wrapped around in an L-shape behind the back of a row of cottage each with its
own small garden.
The route was then marshalled
through some private paddocks along an impressively well maintained grass path
until I materialised onto the Nettelden Road beside a pub, where I could have
easily missed the continuation of the path entirely unless I had not nosily
wandered across to the rear of its car park where the routes waymark post was
rediscovered, with a huge sigh of relief.
I told myself off for singing
another Niamh favourite to myself, “A Long Hard Road,” taken from that timeless
classic, My Little Pony – The Quest of the Princess Ponies... that girl is
turning me into a nut case! I followed the path across the Ringshall Drive path
and up through the woodlands until I reached Ashridge Golf Club’s clubhouse. It’s
a beautiful place, with stunning greens and fairways and an impressive
clubhouse. I did, however, speed up considerably as I got myself from one side
to the other, as a growing sense of being a target for some guffawing ex-public
schoolboy descended upon me; pausing only to look back, now safely on the other
side, to take this picture.
I carried on, turning west along
the Hertfordshire Way until I reached New Road, crossing over to walk up the
long gravel drive towards the Bridgewater Monument in the heart of the Ashridge
Estate.
Things were now heating up.
Looking around at the attire of the few dog walkers around me I could tell that
it was still technically a bit cold, but I was definitely getting pretty warm.
I had promised myself that at 8:30am, at the Bridgewater Monument, having done
about 10 miles, I would stop, eat a banana, refill my water bottle from the
reserve in my pack and have a rest.
The problem was I had found a bit
of rhythm. My feet were no longer hurting, my legs were no longer sore, I
wasn’t particularly thirsty and I was keen to get to Pitstone Hill.
So I didn’t in fact stop, I
carried on straight past the monument and onto the track behind it heading in
the general direction of Stocks Road.
The right path as it turned out
took a bit of finding but having located it, there was steep downhill to the
edge of the woods, then across an open field and through a stile turning right
onto Stocks Road itself.
Turning north up Stocks Road, you
pass yet another Golf Club and then a few very grand houses on your left. I
have no idea who lives in them, but one in particular is a proper mansion set
in a fair bit of land, grand and impressive, and must have some history to it –
yet another local landmark I had been entirely unaware of.
The footpath then breaks from the
road along a stretch of grassed path lined by a few trees before striking out
diagonally across some ploughed fields in the direction of the Ridgeway Path
running along the ridge from Pitstone Hill.
When I say the path runs through
some ploughed fields, it clearly does. There are way marks and laminated signs
urging you to stay on the path and not venture onto the private land... which
is fair enough. However... the path itself has been completely ploughed up
together with the field, making it recognisable as a path only because of the
slight colour deferential in the soil and the impressions of a few boots that
had braved the path before you, thus making it “ankle break heaven” out there.
I reached the brow of Pitstone
Hill in reasonably good nick and having taken a couple of sips of water – but
still not stopping for a break – I set off in the direction of a path that
should have taken me to the Upper Icknield Way Road at its junction with
Vicarage Road.
The only problem was... there didn’t appear to be any such
path. Sure... I found a style, but
clearly the other side was impassable due to the amount of fallen trees, bushes
and mounds of earth that were evident literally feet from the gate. I walked as
far southwest as a small water filled quarry, but it was clear from the map
that this was too far and so I retraced my steps, following a track of sorts
along the fence line which barred me from continuing north.
I staggered up and
down the hill side, ducking thorns and brambles, snagging myself on barbed
wire, until fully satisfied that there was no such path accessible from
Pitstone Hill I began to traipse back up it towards Stocks Road which I knew
would eventually lead to me to Ivinghoe. The language I was using would have
made a soldier blush and I did suffer a sudden pang of paranoia that there
might be a little old lady walking a Westie just out of view being caused great
offence. Luckily for me there was a farmer in a field, just the other side of
that frickin’ fence, driving his Land Rover around a flock of sheep, in an
attempt to herd them into the far opposite corner. As such the sheep were
causing an almighty din which would have more than drowned out any blue
language in which I had been partaking... and which in fact gave me the
confidence to indulge in a good deal more.
Funnily enough, when I was almost
at the gate out onto Stocks Road I spotted a footpath, not marked on the map
and yet officially waymarked, that ran alongside Stocks Road before joining
onto Church Road leading into Ivinghoe. Unfortunately that stretch of road has
no footpath and a barely traversable verge until you are almost at the church
coming into the village, so I had to walk towards oncoming traffic, as per the
old highway code, as vehicles whipped by in excess of the speed limit inches
from my elbow.
As you get to the pavement, if
you look out across the field to your left you can see Pitstone Windmill, a
cracking example of an early form of windmill and one of the oldest in Britain,
standing in the north east corner of a large field near the parish boundary of
Ivinghoe and Pitstone in Buckinghamshire. Perhaps it’s because I’m a massive
Jonathan Creek fan, but I fancy myself living in a converted windmill. I
couldn’t imagine a more pleasant or interesting place to set up home.
Ivinghoe itself is stunning. It
has a large church that dates from 1220, but was set on fire in 1234 in an act
of spite against the local Bishop. The church was rebuilt in 1241 and still
stands today.
For a village Ivinghoe has an
unusual feature: a town hall, rather than a village hall. The village has some
fine examples of Tudor architecture, particularly around the village green and
a fantastic restaurant, The Kings Head, famed for its signature dish, Aylesbury
Duck, where Super Wife and I celebrated ten years together and our wedding
anniversary.
Today, Ivinghoe Green was to be the perfect spot for my first
break – originally scheduled for the Bridgewater Monument 4 miles earlier. I
parked myself on a park bench and tucked into a banana and a seed 9 bar, whilst
replenishing the now empty bottle of water I carry in my coat pocket with the
two litre bottle that I carry in my pack. It was only at this point that I
realised Super Wife had snuck an additional bottle of water into my pack –
surprisingly I hadn’t noticed the additional weight. At this point I had walked
about 14 miles.
I set off again, but
unfortunately in the wrong direction! I was on the outskirts of Ford End just
outside of Ivinghoe when I realised I was heading northwest rather than north
east, so I had to turn around and walk back up Station Road and then Ladysmith
Road, turning northeast at The Rose and Crown in Ivinghoe, a traditional
English village pub established in 1690.
From there I trekked almost two
miles up a bridleway to the hamlet of Ivinghoe Aston, passing as I did so yet
another golf club in the process. I had little else to look at as I approached
the road crossing the bridleway by the village sign but the stony surface of
the bridleway, the hedges either side, and the road itself on the horizon.
During the whole walk towards that road not a single vehicle went by... until I
actually reached it to cross. Sods law, I then had to stop for what seemed an
age to let a stream of vehicles pass in either direction.
Having crossed that road the
bridleway continued, not a pleasant white chalk path as you might expect in the
Chilterns, but a sort of gravel track, but in the distance, with the storm
clouds rolling by over head, you could see a fantastic church set against the
sky on the top of a hill on the horizon.
About a quarter mile further
along I came to a small footbridge over a brook or stream, where I noticed a
carved stone cross set upon a mound of earth at the side of the path. I have
never walked this way before so I had no idea it existed.
It was understated but quite
beautiful, so I took a picture of it whilst I had a sip of water and waited
patiently for two riders to take their horses under the canopy of the tree line
running along the stream and across the little bridge.
Setting off again it was further
along the bridleway, but now with St Mary’s Church getting ever nearer. This
striking church is located on an isolated chalk hillock with a churchyard that
covers the slopes at the top of the hillock surrounded by stone walls, sitting
high above the surrounding landscape.
St Mary's is a noble landmark in the Vale
of Aylesbury with its massive 14th-century limestone tower reaching up towards
the sky. I was very impressed. So much so, that looking at the church completely
took my mind off the newly forming blisters on the balls of my feet.
Alas, the blissful ignorance was
not to continue as the minute I emerged onto the pavements of the residential
streets of Edlesborough the pain in my feet came searing back to the forefront
of my mind. I’m not saying Edlesborough isn’t lovely, but if you’ve seen one
standard paved street you’ve seen them all – diverting they are not.
That said, a handful of Ibuprofen
later and I was off on my way again, I even started whistling as I plodded ever
onwards, past the Green where there were a couple of pitches being used for the
kids football league matches. Rows of parents stood along the side lines
roaring words of “encouragement” at these kids – some more constructive than
others - and the sound of child and adult voices carried across the common and
for quite a way thereafter. I got some funny looks from two gents in a transit
van when I stopped to take a picture of the village sign post. I then realised
that it was quite close to the kids play area and the mind boggles to think
what they might have thought I was up to! Alternatively, they may just have
been confused by the sight of a bearded bloke, looking rather hot and
flustered, with mud up to his knees and his hair standing straight up at the
back of his head. Either way, the sun had got his hat on and I was beginning to
rue the decision to double up on those t-shirts. Looking at the people watching
football, decked out in coats, hats, gloves and stamping their feet, I
suspected that the temperature might in fact be a damn sight cooler than my
internal thermostat was letting on.
Almost seamlessly, I found myself
in Eaton Bray, still walking on the same pavement and along the same road. I
came to a triangular green as I entered the village and turned left up the High
Street, before turning right up School Lane.
At the end of School Lane I could
hear another children’s football match going on behind the school buildings
there, which I could hear for quite some time as I set off across the field
path towards Castle Hill Road in Totternhoe.
The views from these open fields
were stunning. The contrasting colours of the dark brown ploughed fields, the
rich greens of the Dunstable Downs, the bright blue sky behind a flurry of white
and grey clouds – I paused to take a picture (and in truth to down a fair bit
of water and inhale a flax 9 bar!)
I then came to what I can only
describe as the most poxy little footbridge I have ever seen with sort of iron
stiles at either end, which was too narrow to comfortably clamber over without
worrying about your muddy boots slipping on the metal bar and crashing your
face into the concrete posts. It wasn’t a massive problem for me in the end but
anyone with any mobility issues whatsoever would be in serious trouble.
I walked up the footpath past a
residential caravan park in the heart of Totternhoe and as I did an older
gentleman came out to tend his small garden. I wished him a good morning and he
bellowed across the paddock to me “It’s a wee bit nippy today like!” in a thick
Geordie accent, at least it sounded Geordie to me. I hollered back over to him, my brow dripping
with sweat, “It depends on how many miles you’ve just walked mate!” to which we
both laughed, and I trundled on up to the road.
Once at the road, I could see the
Cross Keys pub to my left and Castle Hill Road leading down to Church End on my
right.
I pottered down the road to my
right until I reached the track leading up to the Scout Hut on my left.
Climbing that track through the picnic area and car park at its end, I was soon
up the wooden dirt steps that lead to the bottom of Half Mile Hill.
Half Mile Hill, is a hill that on
one side over looks Totternhoe Quarry. It’s not particularly steep but it sits
quite high up on the landscape and provides stunning views of the surrounding
countryside from its top.
If you’re not too keen on cliff
edges then I would advise you to stay firmly away from the purely cosmetic wire
fence that acts as the only barrier between you and a chalk face down to the
fields below.
Now I say it’s not too steep, but
if you’ve already walked 20 miles by this point, it still a sustained climb
enough to leave you gasping for some water by the top, especially on a hot day
– which is what this afternoon was shaping up to be.
Some kids, no older than 12 years
old I should think came scampering over the top of the hill and down the other
side towards me as I trudged on upwards towards the top. I could tell that one
of the lads was looking at me thinking “Crumbs! That bloke is out of shape!”
(because, of course, this 21st century lad’s inner monologue would
be that of one of the Famous Five). I had to catch myself from blurting out
“You’d bloody look like this as well pal, if you had just done 20 miles!” –
damn my inner monologue... always causing trouble!
From there, it was down the other
side of the hill, turning north up to the dirt and gravel track that leads
eastwards to the end of the area officially sanctioned the end of the
Totternhoe Knolls and the beginning of the area of the Green Lanes.
It had been my intention to exit
the Green Lanes at the point where a path appears to the left taking the walker
down to the corner of Brewers Hill Road and Drovers Way in Dunstable, but I
decided that I hadn’t really walked quite far enough today.
Despite an
aggravating blister on the ball of my right foot I rambled on up the Lanes
until I came to their end at the junction with West Street.
From there I turned left down
West Street at a slow amble and then left again onto Drovers Way. It was about
12:45. The traffic was picking up, people were milling about; other than
football playing kids and their parents and supporters, this was the first sign
of a Saturday level of activity that I had come across since I set out at 5am.
I text my mum as I got to Pascomb
Road to “slap on the kettle” – she had been looking after Niamh while I walked
and Super Wife worked over in Luton – and a few minutes later there I was,
walking up the garden path.
At this point I had walked about
22 (and a bit) miles. I was tired but not shattered. My feet hurt and were blistered
but not unmanageably so. The one thing I definitely was... I was hot.
Problem solved by pouring the
other 2 litres of water that remained in my backpack over the noggin!
(Whilst pulling a face like a gorilla Super Wife just pointed out!)
I had arrived at my mum’s at
about 12:50 and had done 22 miles by that time, which stands me in good stead
for the big walk itself. Had this been a day on that walk, I would have done my
required mileage by 1pm, leaving about 9 hours of summer sunshine to rest, recuperate
and relax before the next day or to add a few extra miles after a good four
hour rest.
I rested at my mum’s for a bit,
drank a couple of cups of sweet tea and shared another banana with Niamh and
then packed everything up into the buggy and strolled into Dunstable with mum.
We stopped for a cup of coffee in Amici in the town centre, then I walked mum
to the bus stop outside Asda, before pushing Niamh home via the White Lion
Retail Park and Luton Road.
By the time we got home it was
about 4 o’clock and I had racked up 24 (and a bit) training miles – not bad
considering I didn’t even want to get out of bed this morning!
Can you spare a few quid in support of the MS Society, Macmillan Cancer Support and Help for Heroes?