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Monday, 1 February 2021

Kinder Scout

A favourite Derbyshire walk through the years, possibly a metaphor for life 

(first posted 13th January, 2018, 1550 words)

A walk on Kinder Scout (route from an early John Merrill book)

The bleak Kinder moorland can be incongruously beautiful on a fine day, but it was not like that on my first visit in 1974. It was dark and grim, covered in cloud, difficult to know where you were heading. As we ascended Fair Brook, veils of thick, grey mist closed around us, washing away the last of the autumn colours. Drizzle drifted down from the plateau, permeating our cagoules and soaking my canvas rucksack. It had been drenched so often it was beginning to smell like a bag of old socks. It could have been a metaphor for my life at the time: three jobs inside a year and a pointless, wasted term at teacher training college.

Fair Brook crags: 1974
Seeking shelter: Fair Brook crags, 1974
Kinder is a silly place to be out in bad weather, but Neville and I likened ourselves to hardened Himayalan mountaineers. I had even started to grow a beard like Chris Bonington’s, a new self-image to get life and work back on track. The comparison was ridiculous, but role models and self-images can be helpful. There is nothing wrong in trying to find a bit of mental strength and inspiration, despite the obvious differences between the Himalayas and the Derbyshire Peak District, or for that matter, between a fearless expedition leader and an assistant accountant in an office.

We sheltered under overhanging rocks at the top of Fair Brook to eat our sandwiches. From there we took a rough bearing across the moor to Kinder Downfall: about 255 degrees. In more forgiving terrain, you would pick out a distant landmark and head towards it, re-checking your compass just now and again, but distant landmarks are few on Kinder Scout: there is only moor and sky if you’re lucky, and mist if you’re not. You can believe it the roof of the world where abominable bipeds dwell.

Kinder Scout: spring 1975
An abominable biped on Kinder Scout: spring 1975

The surface is broken into a maze of peat ridges, or ‘hags’, by deep, slippery trenches known as ‘groughs’, which twist and turn like waves in a sea of mud. Groughs can be fifteen feet deep (five metres), and there are a lot of them to cross.

Hags and groughs on Kinder plateau: David Appleyard, Wikimedia commons
Hags and groughs on Kinder plateau, 2005

Just as in life, you glide effortlessly along the tops of the hags until they veer off in the wrong direction or lead to a patch of impassable bog. You backtrack, looking for a place to cross, and descend into a grough, half-walking, half-sliding, only half in control, struggling to keep your balance and stay clean and dry. Inevitably you end up smeared in black peaty mud. You follow the grough until it narrows to a steep watery ‘V’ where, legs apart, one at each side, you struggle to continue. Or again, the grough turns in the wrong direction or leads into a pond. You look for a place to climb out and follow the tops of the hags again. Before long, you are laughing like a toddler stamping through muddy puddles in Wellington boots.

You check your direction constantly but cannot tell how far to the left or right you have drifted. Soon you can be a hundred yards or more off course. You might be enticed into following footprints, but they can easily be from someone else who was helplessly lost, perhaps one of those abominable bipeds. You might see other walkers and decide to follow them, only to find they are wandering round in circles. You really have to trust your compass, no matter how fallible. Providing you do, then sooner or later you will come upon the River Kinder: not a river in the ordinary sense, but a wider, flatter trench than the groughs, with a stony and sometimes sandy floor. For most of the year you can walk westwards along its bed until you arrive high above the sheer gritstone gorge of Kinder Downfall.

River Kinder: 1974
The Kinder River: 1974

Kinder Downfall is the highest waterfall in the Peak District, where the Kinder River tumbles a hundred feet (30 metres) from the plateau. It is magnificent in spate, especially when the wind blows it back upon itself in a shimmering rainbow cloud. At such times it would not be unreasonable to call it Kinder Upfall.

Kinder Downfall in spate: Dave Dunford, Wikimedia Commons
Kinder Downfall (or should it be called Kinder Upfall?), 2005

We pressed on along the edge of the plateau – part of the Pennine Way – in our murky globe of gloom. We could just about make out the distinctive starfish shape of Kinder Reservoir below, but there were none of the distant views beyond Manchester to the mountains of Snowdonia you see in clear weather. We began to doubt our route. A couple of walkers came towards us, the only others we had seen all day. We asked whether we were on the right path for the Snake Inn. They looked doubtful.

“Probably, but it must be at least ten miles,” they thought.

That worried us. But that’s the thing about walking. It is a metaphor for life. Whether you are slogging up a mountain, plodding endless distance or trailing others in wretched misery, you have to keep going through the grit and grimness. You have to get back on the hags and leave the groughs behind. Usually you do. In my case, it was the accountancy that got left behind. The Chris Bonington thing really did help, even though Bonington would never have been an accountant in the first place, or had his sandwiches made by his mum.

It turned out we were right and the other walkers wrong. Within half an hour we reached the corner of the plateau above Ashop Head, where a steep slope descends to a signpost at the junction of the Snake Path and Pennine Way. Within another half hour we were at the derelict Ashop Clough shooting cabin where we stopped for the last of our coffee, and for Neville to smoke his pipe and reflect upon the meaning of things.

Ashop Clough shooting cabin: 1975 and 2011
The derelict shooting cabin in Ashop Clough: 1975 and 2011

Such as what did the shooting cabin mean? In 1974, it still sheltered you from the worst of the elements. You could just about visualise the cosy refuge it must have been for the privileged few before the “right to roam” trespass of 1932. The likes of us would not have been welcome then on the Kinder moors, I would have not been exploring different careers, and most of Bonington’s mountaineering pals would have been at work instead of climbing. The derelict structure was like a monument to social progress and freedom of opportunity. 

Tellingly, it provides no shelter at all now. During the last forty years or so, the east gable end, the fireplace and roof have disappeared without trace. The only slight improvement is to the bridge across the stream to Black Ashop Moor, which is now marginally sturdier than the precarious plank you once dared cross at your peril. Fortunately, you never had to. The route continues on the northern side of the stream and soon passes through woods to steps back up to the road.

Seal Edge looking towards Fair Brook
Looking along Seal Edge towards Fairbrook Naze on the far right

Since then, I have wandered this northern part of Kinder Scout at least a dozen more times, in every kind of weather. One summer day, when the sun was shining and the ferns and heather at their loveliest, I took my son and daughter, she was then only seven, across the bottom of Fair Brook and up to Seal Edge, forgetting just how far it is to return down the Fair Brook valley, but she did it without complaint. Another day, alone on the same route, I surprised two wild wallabies at the western end of Seal Edge, although not as much as they surprised me. They jumped out and disappeared across the moor before I could get my camera, leaving me wondering whether I had simply imagined them.

Icicles on the Snake Path: winter 1976
Icicles on the Snake Path through Ashop Clough: winter 1976

I have been on the Snake Path when the Ashop was frozen hard and long icicles lined the banks like crystal chandeliers. I have walked east along The Edge aiming for the top of Fair Brook and completely failed to recognise it (not alone I should add), and had to hitch a lift back to the car after finally descending to the road. That’s what happens on Kinder Scout when you arrogantly think you know it well enough not to look at your map and compass. I once tried to cross the top of Kinder from the Downfall to Fair Brook, which requires more accurate compass use than east to west, and after what seemed like an eternity, emerged way off course near Fairbook Naze looking over The Edge. Not accurate enough! When I eventually reached Fair Brook that day, the descent just about finished my knees. Lessons, lessons, lessons, but things turn out right in the end.

I suppose now, with satnav, you know exactly where you are all the time, but I’m not having one of those. It’s cheating. I don’t want to make things too easy for myself. It doesn’t fit my self-image, even though, unlike Sir Chris Bonington, I won’t be shimmying up The Old Man of Hoy at the age of eighty.

Ascent to Kinder Scout via Fair Brook, 1974 and 2007
Fair Brook with Kinder Scout in mist in 1974, and clear in 2007


32 comments:

  1. I loved this - thank you! Your post transported me far, far away from my home office desk, where I have been getting ready for another day, week and month of work.
    An area that we know reasonably well and keep visiting in different seasons and different weather - and and different stages of life - can really ground us, in the best possible sense.

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    1. I was concerned that this post is quite long - I often wrote longer pieces when I first started, which tend to go unread. As regards the walk, yes, I suppose it has been a kind of "touching base" thing for me over the years. Hadn't thought of it like that.

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  2. Wonderful writing, Tasker! I was spellbound, which doesn’t happen often.

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  3. Thanks for re-sharing this piece, Tasker. Found myself thinking of the various paths of my own life as I read your reflection.

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    1. Thanks for reading - as mentioned above, it is quite long.

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    1. Definitely not a place for the weedy. In fact, I might be too weedy to get up there myself now, or too weedy to get back down again if I did.

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  5. Oh I loved this post Tasker. I have been up on the Kinder Plateau several times - always on my own I might add. It's like arriving on the surface of a different planet. I have been especially intrigued by the eroded stone outcrops that circle the plateau. Of course "The Boxing Glove" is my favourite. And have you been to Madwoman's Stones - named after Margaret Thatcher I believe? I never realised that the ruin in Ashop Clough was once a shooting cabin -I had assumed it was a small sheep farm - perhaps seasonal.

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    1. Only once have I been up from the Edale side so I didn't know about the madwoman. I suppose I must have seen the Boxing Gloves several times but didn't know it was so named. I must seek out my pictures of other walks around there, many inspired by John Merrill's very first book.

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  6. Hello!
    We have been away from the Blogosphere for some time but we are delighted to have returned and found you and your blog.

    It has been wonderful to hike with you virtually. In our cases, joining you for the real thing would be well outside our comfort zones. But, this has been bracing and intriguing. Nature in all its seasons and moods has both a challenging and healing quality. Yes, surely it is a metaphor for life itself.

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    1. Thank you for visiting and thank you for following. That walk might be outside my own comfort zone now. I need to go back while there's a chance I still can.

      Gosh, what peripatetic lives you lead, and what a long time since your last post!

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  7. What an amazing hike you have taken us on! I enjoyed it very much and almost feel as if I should check my shoes for mud! This does sound like a challenging hike but well worth it.

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    1. Pleased to have been able to make it feel so real. It is a good walk, but quite demanding.

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  8. Every trip a personal challenge and a personal best. Save one...

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    1. As I get older I'm beginning to think just walking to the post box is a contender for a personal best.

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  9. The famous Kinder Scout it looks somewhat bleak, did all those people really trek over it? Now, though not so in Scotland, we must protect our rights to wander the public footpaths before they are closed by the farmers.

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    1. I'm not sure whether the mass trespassers went into the middle of the plateau. Not many I suspect. It's getting quite badly eroded now, with moor replanting and regeneration schemes needed, so perhaps I shouldn't be encouraging people to go trekking across the middle.

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  10. It's not an area that I have hiked. I was mesmerised and thoroughly enjoyed your rambles. Whilst I was reading I was thinking how long ago that was until it dawned on me that most of my serious rambling took place in the Sixties and by 1975 I was on Lewis and had a young family. I don't think that I ever had the imagination t think of my rambles as a metaphor for life even though my paid working life started as a trainee accountant (and lasted only a few months).

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    1. To be honest, the metaphor aspect took on a life of its own once I started writing this, although it was only putting into words what I'd thought all along. I stuck accountancy for 5 years. It seemed claustrophobic at the time but it taught me a lot.

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  11. Photos 1, 3 and 4 made me think of the Yangtze.

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    1. You've got me googling pictures of the Yangtze. I see what you mean. Why go there when you can go to Derbyshire?

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  12. Loved this Tasker - and your lovely writing if i may say so. When we lived in Lichfield many years ago my first husband and I climbed Kinder - nearly killed me. In those days the Snake Pass was spoken about in hushed tones - your car had to be really trustworthy and the weather forecast good. Love the icicles photograph. Luckily it was a lovely day when we climbed all those years ago.

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    1. Thank you. Sorry the icicles picture isn't in better focus. On a warm day the top of Kinder Scout is a very peaceful place. You absorb the heat rising up from the peat, and the only signs of human life are the contrails from transatlantic jets high above.

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  13. You are so fortunate to have had a life long connection with a place of wilderness and to have been able to share that with your next generation. Exploring the world has its excitements, exploring your own back yard has rewards like growing roots deeper and stronger. Thank you for sharing your obvious enjoyment of your place. F

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    1. It has always been around an hour's drive for me to get there, and for a few years I lived much further away, but it has always been worth going, a small patch of wilderness.

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  14. These are so impressive photos, Tasker - very moody and beautiful.
    (Though not ten horses would bring me up there - I admire people as my daughter-in-love, who climbs very high mountains -- I shiver, coming from Bremen where everything is absolutely flat).

    How come that your post reminds me of John Bunyan? (Honestly: I read the whole Pilgrim's Progress) - have to think why it reminds me. Maybe your metaphor for life.

    I liked to climb the "Himalaya" with you as my sherpa - climbing in imagination. A real adventure, thank you!

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    1. I must read John Bunyan and compare. Never thought of myself as a sherpa, though. I'd be hopeless with heavy loads. I suppose one of the reasons I like it there is that it is so different from the area I originate from - the River Humber area - which is also flat. Probably quite similar. My great grandfather was a sea captain who used to sail from the Humber ports, sometimes to Bremerhaven.

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  15. The photos look as though they’ve been plucked from The Hobbit

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    1. No, I didn't use any from YP's Geograph account.

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  16. Wow, fantastic and atmospheric photos, and so well described.

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    1. Some of the photos are public domain. Those of my own are scanned from old colour slides which we can now see were never particularly good quality, technically, technologically or artistically. I enjoyed writing it.

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I welcome comments and hope to respond within a day or two, but my condition is making this increasingly difficult. Some days I might not look here at all. Also please note that comments on posts over two weeks old will not appear until they have been moderated.