Brigantes Walking Holidays

 

 

Brigantes Walking Holidays & Baggage Courier

(Pennine Way, Dales Way & The North of England)

 

 

 

Pennine Way

 

 

Our current known start-out dates from Edale for the 2008 season will be:

Saturday, 26th April

Saturday, 3rd May

Saturday, 10th May

Saturday, 17th May

Saturday, 24th May

Saturday, 31st May

Saturday, 7th June

Saturday, 14th June

Saturday, 21st June

Saturday, 28th June

Saturday, 30th August

Saturday, 6th September

 

 

 

We will also undertake to start the trip on other dates, provided your party numbers four or more persons.

 

The Pennine Way (Full Length)

 

The Pennine Way is Britain's first and best: known National Trail, and stretches for roughly 270 miles from the Derbyshire Peak District to the Scottish Borders, maintaining a high and often wild course along the backbone of England. The route traverses a wide variety of terrain, from the gritstone moorlands of Derbyshire through the limestone country of the Yorkshire Dales, to the bare boggy final stretch through the Cheviot Hills to the finishing point at Kirk Yetholm. It offers a superb and ever changing landscape of hills, moors, valleys and villages.

 

The route is traditionally walked from south to north, from Edale to Kirk Yetholm, and most guidebooks describe it this way. The Pennine Way is a serious challenge, and you must be fully equipped to meet it, and unless you are fit and an experienced long-distance walker, you should not tackle the Pennine Way, certainly not alone. It is important that your boots are broken-in, and that you are able to carry a rucksack with your requisites for one or two days. Most people undertaking the walk in one go take 2 - 3 weeks to complete it, and many people choose to do a section at a time. The usual time required for a non-stop walk, is 17 days. The route attracts thousands of walkers each year, and yet some do not get beyond the second day, usually because fitness and stamina have been overestimated, and the weight of personal belongings required, has also been over-estimated!

 

The assistance of the Pennine Way Baggage Courier has helped hundreds of walkers to achieve the completion of the walk, and also to enjoy it without having to carry a heavy backpack, knowing that warm and dry clothing awaits them at the end of each day.

Our courier service is the only service which will provide you with door to door baggage transfers, from Edale at the start, all the way to the end of the walk in Kirk Yetholm, by using our own vehicles and personnel, thereby ensuring reliability.

 

The Way is only intermittently way marked with signs and cairns, so you will need a guidebook and maps and a compass. One of the best recognised guide books for the route is the "Pennine Way Companion" by A. Wainwright (published by Michael Joseph, £9-99) Another is "The Pennine Way" by Martin Collins - (Cicerone Press, price £7-99). Maps - OS Outdoor Leisure, sheets 1, 21, 2, 30,31,43,42,16.

 

Be prepared for the rigours of hill walking, carrying warm and wet-weather clothing as a necessity, as well as sufficient food and drink, since this is not available over many stretches of the walk, once you have started out for the day.

 

The trek commences with the peat groughs of Kinder and Bleaklow followed by the wild moorland of the Bronte country around Haworth, before reaching the superb limestone scenery of the Yorkshire Dales. Streams disappear underground, and potholes abound as the walk passes Malham Tarn and Cove, and makes the ascent of Pen-y- Ghent before descending to Horton -in-Ribblesdale. From here good tracks lead over the moors to the old market town of Hawes in Wensleydale. Great Shunner Fell is climbed on the way to the old lead-mining area of Swaledale, and via Keld village, upwards again towards the highest inn in England, at Tan Hill. At 1732 feet above sea-level, this was once an important meeting place of trade routes, and the haunt of local coal miners. The Way continues via Baldersdale and the Balderhead dam to Middleton -inTeesdale, thence via Langdon Beck and Englands highest waterfall at High Force, to Cauldron Snout and High Cup Nick, before descending into the pretty red sandstone village of Dufton, nestling on the western side of the Pennine chain.

 

From Dufton the route continues eastwards over Cross Fell, the highest point of the walk, then on through the Northumberland National Park towards the northernmost section of the Roman Empire defined by Hadrians Wall, its milecastles and forts being of great historical interest. The long trek through the Keilder Forest area and thence along the ridge of the Cheviot Hills and over the Scottish border to Kirk Yetholm completes the 270 mile walk of the Pennine Way. Congratulations will be in order, but there will be no official reception, and no bands playing!

 

For this walk, we will arrange your accommodation on a Bed and Breakfast basis (evening meals can be arranged also) at local inns, hotels or private residences, all of which have been tried and tested by us satisfactorily in past years, and for your guidance, the following is a list of the usual stopovers, with the daily distances between each.

 

Day 1 Edale to Crowden in Longdendale

15 miles

Day 2 Crowden to. Standedge 10
Day 3 Standedge to Hebden Bridge 14
Day 4 Hebden Bridge to Ponden/Haworth 10
Day 5 Ponden to Earby/ East Marton 12
Day 6 Earby to Malham 15
Day 7 Malham to Horton-in-Ribblesdale 14
Day 8 Horton to Hawes 14
Day 9 Hawes to Keld 12
Day 10 Keld to Baldersdale/Bowes 14
Day 11 Baldersdale to Langdon Beck/High Force 18
Day 12 Langdon Beck to Dufton 12
Day 13 Dufton to Alston 20
Day 14 Alston to Greenhead (Romar Wall) 18
Day 15 Greenhead to Bellingham 23
Day 16 Bellingham to Byrness 16
Day 17 Byrness to Kirk Yetholm 26

 

 

To download our 2008 Pennine Way Price List - Click Here

 

Pennine Way - Baggage Transfer Booking Form - Click Here

 

Pennine Way - Baggage & Accommodation Booking Form - Click Here

 

 

 

Pen-y-Ghent, Horton-in-Ribblesdale.

 

 

 

Please note:

 

We do not service a delivery to Uswayford Farm in the Cheviots, but can make suitable alternative arrangements, in order to shorten the last days walk between Byrness and Kirk Yetholm.

 

Public Transport:

 

Trains between Manchester and Sheffield call at Edale, the usual starting point, and a limited Bus service operates from Kirk Yetholm to Kelso in the Borders, from where buses to Jedburgh, Edinboro', Berwick on Tweed, or Newcastle operate.

 

Brigantes will also operate a return service to the Skipton area from Kirk Yetholm by minibus, for parties of four or more persons, by arrangement.

 

Pennine Highlights

 

An alternative for walkers who are restricted by the time available, and who would like to experience some of the best parts of the Pennine Way.  This is a four or five night option through the middle section of the walk, commencing in Hawes in North Yorkshire, and finishing at either Dufton or Alston in the North Pennines. En-route, walkers will pass some of the natural highlights of the trail, including Hardraw Force, High Force, High Cup Nick, and Cross Fell.

 

Please note that for clients making their own booking arrangements using Youth Hostel accommodation, the following hostels are "self-catering", and in some cases there are no local shops from which to obtain provisions:

  • Mankinholes, Earby, Byrness, and Kirk Yetholm.