Monday, May 28, 2012

Da Plan, Da Plan!


A guidebook to the Cotswold Way describes it this way:

“The Cotswold Way measures 102 miles on its journey from Chipping Campden to Bath, and it’s a devious route – a switchback, stuttering, to-ing and fro-ing, climbing and falling walk. One moment you’re wandering along the scarp edge, with toy-sized farms and villages scattered across the plains far below, the next you’re heading down to them – to explore a magical village, or a small market town with age in its streets, whose cottages are faintly warm and luminous, as if they knew the trick of keeping the lost sunlight of centuries glimmering about them. To walk south along the Cotswold way is to make a pilgrimage with Bath, its Regency splendor and the glory of its abbey, beckoning from afar.”  

In those few sentences lie the reason we’re walking the Cotswold Way this year. That is, we want to see if we can find people that actually talk like this.

But seriously, folks, isn’t that a beautiful description? Just think, if England can produce writing like this for trail guides, imagine what they could do with books, plays, and such. 

Like our walks in Ireland, this walk will be from village to village, with overnight stays in Inns and B&B’s.  Our luggage is driven ahead to that night’s B&B, and we walk with only daypacks.  It sounds like daytime temperatures will be in the low 70’s, and we’ll have to deal with rain from time to time.

Our itinerary for the walk looks like this:
Day 1 (Tuesday, June 5): Chipping Campden to Winchcombe: 17 miles. This is a lot of miles for one day, so we’re going to try to do a  6 mile leg of it the day before,  after we get into Chipping Campden.
Day 2:  Winchcombe to Cheltenham: 16 miles
Day 3: Cheltenham to Painswick: 14 miles
Day 4: Painswick to Uley/Dursley: 13 miles
Day 5: Uley/Dursley to Wotton under Edge: 10 miles
Day 6: Wotton under Edge to Hawkesbury: 8 miles
Day 7: Hawkesbury to Cold Ashton: 13 miles
Day 8: Cold Ashton to Bath: 10 miles

You gotta love the names of the villages in the Cotswolds. That will probably be the topic of a blog along the way.
    
There is a scientific component to this walk.  That component has to do with warm beer.  The hypothesis we’ve developed for this part of the walk is that it is possible to learn to like warm beer, but that it requires consistent, repeated exposure to fine English ales over a period of several days to do so.  Followers of this blog should expect to read about these efforts at consistent, repeated exposure to English Ales.   Be assured that these efforts won’t be your basic pub crawls, but will, in fact, be done in the name of science.

I know many of you are asking the question:  “Are Marty and Alan ‘s wives involved in any of this?” And you aren’t the first to ask this question. Pat and Donna brought up the subject early on. So, after Marty and I finish the Cotswold Way, we’re returning to London to meet them.  After a couple of days in London, Marty and Donna will off to Paris and Amsterdam.  Pat opted for Italy, so she and I are headed for Milan, Venice, Bologna, Florence and Bellagio.  We’re anticipating that the scientific portion of the trips with wives will rely less on warm beer and more on great wine and rich food.
   
I’ll try to keep the blog updated regularly, but I know from previous experience I might miss a day, due to things like limited internet access, or excessive experimentation with warm beer. But I’ll make it up when I can.

A few comments about ... comments:
 Please comment. We love to hear comments  from everyone when we’re on these walks. In blogs of earlier walks, some folks have had problems getting past the Blogger/Google registration process, probably because Google is trying to glean marketing information from current and previous generations of your entire family while you register.

So, I’m going to try leaving the comments settings on this blog open to everyone, but require you to go through the word verification process to leave a comment.  That should at least eliminate the automated spammers.

Hope that works for everybody.  (If it doesn’t, how will I know?)

15 comments:

  1. Let me know if you meet the Queen. Have a blast and see you guys in 9 days.

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  2. We will be following your progress. Do you have your maps ready?

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    1. Do we have maps? Well, yes! We have a set of Ordinance Survey Maps (England's version of USGS) at a large enough scale to show individual buildings along the trail. We've got a set of maps from one of the guidebooks that doesn't show elevation, but is an even larger scale (2"=1km). And I've got another map on a smaller scale that is supposedly the only thing you need, but it's not as much fun.

      And I found that if you follow Google Maps (satellite view)at the highest level of detail, you can actually see the trail much of the way from Chipping Campden to Bath. So I spent an evening following the trail from end to end using satellite views, doing things like picking out some of the inns and B&B's we'll be staying in.

      Pretty cool, huh? Or is that a little too much?

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  3. This feels oddly familiar-sitting at my desk, in my nice air conditioned sterile environment, reading about yet another amazing, exciting, once-in-a-lifetime adventure you are going to take.

    All I can say is-have a fantastic time! We're all looking forward to following your journey. And the reports on warm beer.

    And remember-
    “When you come to a fork in the road….take it” – Yogi Berra

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  4. Warm beer, and you have to walk forv10 days to get it? And golf - four hours in a golf cart and and cold beer. Have a great time, stay safe and post lots of photos.

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    1. Hmm - a golf cart and cold beer? That might be a great way to hike.

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    2. It is, I plan to do some alternate hiking like that while you're gone. I figure the walk from the cart to the green is pretty much considered hiking. Let alone the to take the cart back after 18. I'm getting worn out thinking about it....

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  5. I'm all for warm beer but....I'll take a taxi. Looking forward to your updates. Bill

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  6. OK, so you have the maps. Will you be posting any here on your Blog so we can visualize your journey. :o)

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    1. John, that's a terrific idea. I think I've figured out how to use Google My Maps to do that. I'll try it when we get there.

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  7. This sounds amazing! I am going to have to plan a trip like this someday. Have a blast (and a beer for me)!

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  8. Marty, I say stay in London for 2 days drink beer.. Have wives come over early and really enjoy vacation. GOD , I wish I had the get up & go to go with you. unc dick

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  9. I think Uncle Dick has the right idea!

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  10. Hey Dad - hope the trip is going well. It looks like you guys are going to Wotten today. No posts since the start of the trip - I wonder if the warm beer experiment is going too well, and you've been too buzzed to post or you've pawned off you computer for a portable keg of warm Guinness.

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    1. Got your reply. I followed the top link on your facebook page and it gets me to your first post and only your first post, but then if I look at the blog archive links on the right I see that there have been 13 others... so your posts are getting though, but that first link on your FB page just gets me here.

      Glad things are going well. Class is over, got exams next week and then I'll be done with year 2... hard to believe.

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