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Introduction
St Bees
Ennerdale
Wast Water - Wander
Wast Water - Scafells
Wast Water
Borrowdale
Grasmere
Patterdale - Helvellyn
Patterdale
Wheat field, clouds and path
Wheat field, clouds and path near Breckon Hill Farm ruins
Shap
Kirkby Stephen
Keld
Reeth
Richmond
Danby Wiske
Ingleby Cross
Clay Bank
Lion Inn
Grosmont

The North of England is traversed from sea-cliff (the Irish Sea at St Bees) to sea-cliff (the North Sea at Robin Hood's Bay) by this marvellous walk through some of the grandest scenery in the North. It was originally the concept of the late A. Wainwright (a famous English hillwalker and journalist based in the Lake District) who first placed a ruler across the northern hills and inscribed a line from sea to sea. First published in the early 1970s, his guidebook took many people on this great journey.

The Coast to Coast Walk (C2C) is fairly long at 304 kilometres (190 miles) and passes through three National Parks (the Lake District, Yorkshire Dales and then the North York Moors). The terrain is varied with the mountains of the Lake District yielding to the Yorkshire hills, who subside into the flat Vale of Mowbray with the final uplift at the Cleveland Hills leading over moors to the sea.

The original walk is designed to get you from one coast to the other in a straight line allowing most people to finish in 2 weeks. However there are many interesting places just off the route so I decided to visit a few of the Lake District mountains on my way. If you have time then your options include:
Extending the journey up from Ennerdale by climbing onto the ridge containing High Stile and Haystacks (making a long and vigorous day).
Heading south over Black Sail Pass to Wast Water and the chance to climb Scafell, Scafell Pike and even Great Gable. Rejoin the C2C either by Moses' Trod or Styhead Pass.
Take in the Langdale Pikes on the way to Grasmere rather than the easier route over Greenup Edge.
Stop in Patterdale for great views from either Saint Sunday Crag or Helvellyn.
From Keld, a day-trip up to Sleightholme Moor can be rewarded by good food and beer at the Tan Hill Inn. Alternately a walk up to Great Shunner Fell gives good views.

Information for the walk can be gathered from the following guidebooks:

The Coast to Coast Walk written by Paul Hannon , published by Hillside Publications, (1992). This is a good guidebook in the style of Wainwright's original book - a strip map of the journey, pen sketches of sights and a few black and white photos. He has good planning advice with lots of useful addresses, lists of facilities along the route and hints on variations that may be made.
By now Wainwright's book may have been re-issued in an updated form - keep an eye out for it.
Wainwright's Coast-To-Coast Walk A. Wainright, 1988 - a cofee-table style book with many wonderful photos.
A Walk of 382 Miles in 11 Days from the West Coast to the East Coast of England by Richard Long - a pictoral book of his journey across England.

For more information, look at my fact sheet.

Also have a look at:

I did this walk in July, 1993 so the standard warning applies - this is not an up-to-date or comprehensive guide so consult the above references.


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