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Hi, we're Neil and Tanya, and together we enjoy long distance walking. In 2014 we plan to walk the length of the British Isles, from Mizen Head in the south of Ireland to Malin Head in the north, then the length of Great Britain from John O'Groats in the north to Land's End in the south, a total of about 1600 miles, in aid of ShelterBox

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Monday 2 June 2014

The Alternative Pennine Way


After our gloriously indirect route on the Scottish National Trail, for getting through northern England we chose to follow the Alternative Pennine Way - a relatively direct route stretching 250 miles from Jedburgh in the Scottish Borders to Youlgreave in Derbyshire.

The "standard" route from John o'Groats to Land's End uses the Pennine Way, but we hiked that over Christmas and New Year 2008 - 2009, so the Alternative Pennine Way seemed like a good option. It's a bit obscure, as it only exists in a guide book published in 1992 and not reprinted since. We saw a few "APW" signs on our first two days but that was it.

It uses a good mix of well-used and not-so-well-used footpaths, minor roads and forestry tracks, as well as some completely pathless cross-country sections to keep us working hard for our daily mileage!
Something we have appreciated about the route, which weaves its way around the Pennine Way, is that it doesn't avoid features previously thought to be too unattractive to feature on a walking route. Kielder Forest was Europe's largest manmade forest at the time of publication - while the Pennine Way skirts around the edge, the APW plunges through the heart of it and the guidebook tells you a lot about its creation and the forestry business. While the Pennine Way avoids the relics of the lead mining industry (mostly 16th to 19th century), the APW takes you right past old levels disappearing into the hillside, flues, chimneys and spoil heaps - all really interesting stuff for us.

But it's not all a totally manmade landscape - it's also taken us through some wonderfully bleak moorland and quiet dales, and given us new perspectives on places we've visited many times before.
Hope you like the photos.

The Roman road of Dere Street
Milecastle 42 - Hadrian's Wall
Following a mossy ride in Kielder Forest
APW sign - Kielder Forest
Road north of Hadrian's Wall

Moor above Unthank
Smelt mill flue - Dryburn Moor
Smelt mill chimney - Dryburn Moor
  
High Cup Nick from near Dufton
Lane near Appleby
Meadows in Wensleydale
Bishopdale
Bishopdale
Pathless expanse on Scrafton Moor
Cotton grass on Scrafton Moor
Between Coverdale and Nidderdale
Descent into Nidderdale
Greenhow lead mine
Five Rise locks - Bingley
Footpath down into Addingham
Meadows on the way to Addingham
Bolton Abbey - Wharfedale

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