We all woke up good spirits after a very comfortable night's sleep in our room. I had another shower just for the hell of it as I anticipated that the opportunities to have a shower would be few and far between over the next 9 days. We went down for breakfast at our previously arranged time of 7.30am and were very pleasantly surprised when we were greeted with cereal, toast and delicious porridge. After devouring all of this we departed at a pretty slaggy 8.30 after leaving the B&B lady a fiver tip. I was wearing my standard tank top and running shorts. The weather was very fresh and windy but thankfully not raining. We made our way down to the beach to dip our boots in the sea as this is what we heard was the traditional thing to do at the start of the walk. All of us were in even better spirits now as the start of the walk had finally arrived and we recorded a video/ took some funny videos of the beach on my camera. After leaving the beach we made our way north up the side of the cliff and immediately realised that the walk would be harder than I anticipated with the muddy/slippery path and lack of signposts. Chris almost straight away managed to tear a hole in his expensive ski jumper brushing past some barbed wire fence. After reaching the lighthouse after maybe an hour or hour and a half we made our way inland - this was a relief as this meant (at least initially) walking on roads rather than muddy fields/paths as well as escaping the cold coasterly wind. Then maybe about half an hour or so it started raining - I was already pretty cold by this point and this was the final straw - I stopped under the shelter of a farm outbuilding and got out my tights (which ended up replacing the shorts for the rest of the trip), raincoat, hat and gloves. We polished off the remaining donuts from the coach yesterday to give ourselves a boost. Thankfully the rain didn't last long but soon we were presented with a challenge - jumping over a stream as we couldn't see a bridge that was meant to be crossing the stream roughly where we were. So we found the only point which looked jumpable (still a big gap). Tom jumped first, didn't quite make it and got soaking boots, the same happened to me next. Chris then launched over the massive backpacks and managed to clear the gap. Bastard. Then we had to clamber our way up a steep overgrown embankment and walk over a very boggy field which left us all with wet feet. We eventually came to a road and started walking up a hill. When we got to the top of the hill we saw a signpost so we got the map out and realised that we were going the wrong way and had to go back down the hill - not the start we needed. After this we paid more attention to the map/compass. We then walked on the road for a little way which I was again happy about this time as it meant faster progress as our detour/stream crossing had set us back a few hours. We were then presented with a massive hill which we powered up still having a lot of energy with it still being the first day. On the way up we walked through a wooded area which was meant to have red squirrels in - we didn't see any just the first of many many sheep in the fields after the wooded area. The top of the massive hill greeted us with the first spectacular views of the walk which gave us all a boost. As this blog is being written a few weeks after returning I can't remember everything but I'm pretty sure there was a very steep, slow descent, walking alongside the stream at the bottom and following some signposts as well as relying on the map to get to the side of a massive lake - the first of a few big ones along the way. I thought walking alongside the lake would be pretty easy going - I was wrong. It was alright at first but soon involved clambering up rocks and some pretty steep inclines (it started to rain again here) and a long section of wet, slippery rock/tree roots and the odd patch of more boggy ground). We enjoyed some cough candy's along this section which I especially needed as already had a cold. By the time we had finally reached the end of the lake we were pretty tired and must have covered around 16-20 miles and time was getting on ( I think it was around 5-5.30 with proper darkness starting at about 7. Thankfully we soon reached a big track and we could see that this continued to Blacksail (meaning fast progress and easy navigation) which was at least 5 miles away. I took up my role as pacemaker as we set a decent pace for this last stretch. After around 22 miles my Garmin GPS watch ran out of battery so couldn't really grasp how far we had to go after this point which was annoying. 6.30pm, then 6.45, then 7pm all past and we were still not there and the track was starting to head up into the wilderness - not great as visibility was getting low. This tension amongst us quickened the pace. Thankfully we soon saw a light in the distance so we had Blacksail in sight. We eventually got to Blacksail at around 7.30 just before complete darkness set in. Our initial impressions of the hostel weren't great as we has to pay £21 each for our room, the room was very basic and having a shower involved having to go outside and around the side of the building before opening what was little more than a shed door meaning being cold drying off from the shower or using the toilet. We were lucky to get a bed as we were told that if we had arrived tomorrow there wouldn't have been any space for us. However Blacksail redeemed itself as we were given a big dish of Shepherds pie (or something similar) for free as this was leftovers. Also the young couple running the hostel were very helpful with looking at potential hostels, maps and the weather for the following day as well as offering us a 50p per person cereal breakfast!!! Chris and Tom's feet were pretty badly blistered already leaving a question mark if they would be able to complete the entire walk. Luckily for me my feet were fine - just slight rubbing on my achilles which a couple of blister plasters sorted out. So after our pie/ map looking we went to bed pretty exhausted.
Reviews
The B&B in St Bees - 9/10 - Great value, very friendly service, Nice bed/room/shower, excellent breakfast (especially the porridge which was the best we had during the trip)
Lessons Learned:
Leave earlier, consult the map/compass if you are not 100% sure of where you're going and don't rush this, make sure the watch is fully charged before leaving, try to plan/book accommodation before arriving if possible.