ROGER GOADBY'S
COAST TO COAST WALK
190 MILES FROM
ST. BEES, CUMBRIA ON THE WEST COAST OF ENGLAND
TO ROBIN HOOD’S BAY, WHITBY ON THE EAST COAST
INTRODUCTION
A few months
ago, in my 65th year, I decided that I should do
something which was not easily attainable and
which would help worthwhile charities. I heard
somebody talking about “Wainwrights Coast to
Coast Walk” purportedly the most difficult
recognised walk in this country. Upon making the
necessary enquiries I established that a book
had been published on this particular walk and
specific route maps available from certain
bookshops. As I am not a walker, the distance
involved of 190 miles made me rather
apprehensive but also made me determined,
particularly in view of disparaging comments
made by friends etc., about the unlikely
possibility of me getting very far on the
proposed expedition. My wife Tina would have
also liked to have had an attempt at the 190
mile walk but, unfortunately, she damaged an
ankle in training and the injury is so severe
that she is currently receiving specialist
treatment although she will never be able to
walk long distances again.
In the
meantime, as a result of a telephone
conversation with two friends, Patrick (Pat) and
Mary Handley, who live just north of Sheffield
on the edge of the Moors they decided that they
would like to do the Coast to Coast walk. We
agreed that I would organise all the
accommodation necessary and that Pat would get
the necessary maps and be the route planner.
Tina and I had
already visited a specialist shop in Leicester
to obtain suitable walking boots, socks and
cool-liners and then, together with Pat and Mary
Handley we obtained all the necessary
appropriate clothing from shops in the Sheffield
area. Mary is a regular walker on the Moors in
South Yorkshire and she was looking forward to
testing herself over a long distance.
Unfortunately for me, on a training walk, I
pulled a hamstring and it is only because of the
initial treatment I received from the Barwell FC
physio, Viv Coleman, and subsequently when I
needed treatment every other day as the
departure date got nearer, from Joanne Cheyette
of Imperial Physiotherapy in Leicester, that I
managed to start the walk at all.
A week before the departure date I was unsure
whether I would get to the starting point but
Joanne devised some special warm-up exercises
for me to protect and strengthen the damaged
hamstring and I was able to confirm that I would
give it a go. However, had I known what was to
come in the way of climbing mountains and hills
I would never have contemplated such a project
as I was completely inexperienced and totally
unprepared without being able to do any training
whatsoever in the previous two months. Well,
here goes