It is always good to be back in the Lake District, but this time I was really tired due to outside events before I got there. My initial plan for this holiday had been to start in the town of Skipton and walk across the Yorkshire Dales before crossing the Lake District on the Coast to Coast route. Just before booking my accommodation however, I turned it around so I that I started in the Lake District, and then after booking my accommodation in the Lake District I decided not to go to Skipton but to continue along the Coast to Coast route across the Yorkshire Dales as far as Richmond. When it finally came to actually doing the walk I found that I was so tired I wouldn’t be able to manage the mammoth first days walk across the hills south of Ennerdale to Wastwater that I had planned, so I got off my train along the Cumbrian coast a couple of stops before the usual start of the Coast to Coast walk at St Bees. Instead, I was in Ravenglass where there is a miniature railway (known colloquially as the Ratty) that climbs from the coast up into the hills to the spectacular valley of Eskdale.
From the Eskdale terminus of the railway, at Dalegarth, I headed along a road into the tiny village of Boot (I had never been to Boot before, and it seemed I’d missed out on a tranquil and picturesque place). Passing the iconic Boot Inn I climbed over a bridge and up a steep path to the start of a traverse from Eskdale to Wasdale. The path climbs beside a wall out onto the open fellside with a good rocky surface underfoot that soon deteriorates into, at times, a boggy path, that wasn’t as boggy as I’d feared. I had never taken this route out of Eskdale before and as I was climbing it seemed quite good, but when I reached the picturesque Burnmoor Tarn it became really enjoyable. I had finally reached the top of the pass and started to descend steeply down an excellent path with the stunning scenery of Wasdale Head ahead of me brilliantly lit by the surprising afternoon sun.
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