Tag Archives: Alton

Pilgrims' Way Day 1: Winchester Cathedral to Farnham (3 Stages, 59.63 Km)

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"As I make my slow pilgrimage through the world, a certain sense of beautiful mystery seems to gather and grow". A. C. Bensonkey.

In this post…

    1. Introduction (this is the same as on previous posts, so skip to next section if you’ve already seen it
    2. The statistics and metrics of the day
    3. Stage 01: From Winchester Cathedral to the Cricketers Pub in Alresford
    4. Stage 02: From the Cricketers Pub in Alresford to the Alton House Hotel in Alton
    5. Stage 03: From the Alton House Hotel in Alton to the Bishops Table Hotel in Farnham

Introduction

OK, if this is the first Pilgrim’s Way post of mine that you are reading, I’d recommend you go back a little and read my Introduction to the Pilgrims’ Way blog. There are a few things I explain there that I don’t here and this post might look confusing if you don’t know these things beforehand (e.g. why 15 stages?).

This post is all about the first day of the pilgrimage – but do take into consideration I was cycling, so if you are walking it is likely you’ll cover much less ground than me! In this one day I covered stages 1, 2 and 3 and I describe them separately here. The section below provides the statistics for the full day, but in each video, there are some statistics for each one of the stages such as distance and time.

YouTube Playback speed
YouTube Playback speed settings.

I reckon that the videos show the route and the difficulties quite well, despite being so speeded-up. You can pause them for more detail or reduce the playback speed in the YouTube interface, if you don’t mind watching it for a longer time (if you do this, don’t forget to mute the video to avoid hearing a slowed-down version of the music!).

Also, bear in mind that this pilgrimage was undertaken during the pandemic and that, although some restrictions had been lifted in the UK in August/September, many places, such as small community churches, were still closed.

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Statistics and metrics of the day

All of the details below are in my Pilgrims’ Way  Google Sheets Spreadsheet.

  • Date: Monday, 31 August 2020 (a bank holiday)
  • Route: From Winchester Cathedral to the Bishops Table Hotel, Farnham.
  • Distance:  59.63 km
  • Departure time from Winchester: Around 11:20h.
  • Arrival at Farnham: Around 19:45h.
  • Duration of day’s Journey: 4h 54min
  • Expenses this day: Total = £95.00
    • £30.00 for food.
    • £65.00 – Accommodation
  • Overnight Location: Bishops Table Hotel, Farnham, Hamsphire, England. ✆ +44 1252 710 222
  • Type of Accommodation: Hotel
  • Walking the Pilgrims’ Way Guide (Leigh Hatts) Stages:
  • Physical and Body Stats: Link to the Garmin Connect Page for this ride
      • Duration (elapsed time): 04h 54min
      • Moving time: 4h 36min
      • Average Speed: 12.2 Km/h
      • Average Moving Speed:  13 Km/h
      • Max. Speed: 49.5 Km/h
      • Total Elevation Gain: 594 m
      • Average Heart Rate: 146 bpm
      • Max. Heart Rate: 186 bpm
      • Calories: 3,136 CAL

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Stage 01: From Winchester Cathedral to the Cricketers Pub in Alresford

If you haven’t done so already, please watch the video first and then read this blog for more detail! I didn’t want to include all this information in the video voiceover because it would have added too much to the length of the video (which is 11’17″).

The picture below was used in the video and I hope will help you make more sense of the text below.

Google-Maps-Stage-01-WInchester-to-Alresford
Map of the stage between Winchester and Alresford. The yellow line shows the downloaded walkers’ path and the red is the one I took on my bicycle.

After something of a filming marathon that took over two hours(!), we finally left Winchester around 11:20. Finding our way out of town wasn’t as straightforward as I’d thought it would be – you can see on the map the stretches where our track (in red) diverged from the one taken by pilgrims on foot (in yellow). After a few navigation hiccoughs, we found ourselves riding on the Nuns’ Trail, winding through marshland and small creeks leading to the river Itchen. This is a delightful stretch and I recommend that you take it slowly, not only because is a path shared with walkers, but to take in its natural beauty. Near the start there is a small patch of wood called Hillier’s Haven, with some striking wooden sculptures of animals including a wolf and an owl.

After the Nuns’ Trail the route dips under the A34 and arrives at St Mary’s Church, which is right on the Pilgrims’ Way route and has several references to the Pilgrims’ Way.

As we left St Mary’s, we accidentally took the B3097 up to a field where we rejoined the walkers path…which is where we had to negotiate the first kissing gates – a sure sign that we were on footpaths rather than bridleways. If you are cycling, I would recommend that you stay on the B3097 all the way to Itchen Abbas: Katy and I agree that the experience of cycling through the fields was not worth the considerable inconvenience of getting bikes through the kissing gates!

Itchen Abbas – more specifically, St John’s Church – is a lovely place on the river Itchen. I spent quite some time there riding back and forth over the little bridge so that the German TV crew could capture different shots of me riding and talking about cycling and pilgrimages. As they had done in Winchester, they fitted me with a wireless microphone and the cameraman either ran on foot besides me or drove in front of me sat in the back of the van with its back door open, filming me from the front. This was all a new and unusual experience for me. I found it quite hard to think of things to say!

After Itchen Abbas, the route took us to the Avington Park Golf Course and then through some more fields and woods (where the TV crew did more aerial filming with a drone) with more kissing gates. National Cycle Route 23 runs alongside the golf course and, if you are cycling, I would recommend you take this instead of the walkers’ path, which you will join again later just before Ovington.

Crossing the A31 onto a small dirt track leads to a lane that will take you to a ford and then on to Watercress Meadows. As the name suggests, you’ll see an unusual watercress field on a strip of water to both left and right, and I imagine at the right time of the year it would be quite flowery! Then it’s just a few hundred metres to the Cricketers Pub in Alresford, which is the final destination of this stage.

The picture gallery below shows the pictures taken by Katy and me as we left Winchester and along this stage. Click on any picture to enlarge.

I hope you enjoy the video and the photos.

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Stage 02: From the Cricketers Pub in Alresford to the Alton House Hotel in Alton

If you haven’t done so already, please watch the video first and then read this blog for more detail! I didn’t want to include all this information in the video voiceover because it would have added too much to the length of the video (which is 10’36”).

The picture below was used in the video and I hope will help you make more sense of the text below.

PW-Stage-02-Alresford-to-Alton
Map of the stage between Alresford and Alton. The yellow line shows the downloaded walkers’ path and the red is the one I took on my bicycle.

We didn’t stop in Alresford: I would imagine that in normal times the Cricketers pub would be a good refreshment / toilet stop for pilgrims – but in our case the pub was closed due to the pandemic.

We continued riding on Tichborne Down Street before taking Whitehill Lane towards Bishop’s Sutton. After Bishop’s Sutton, the route went along the edge of a grassy field (after a rather challenging kissing gate), and this is where I filmed Katy and I talking. As Katy mentions on the video, we should have continued on the B3047 until it crosses the A31 onto Old Park Rd and then Parkside Lane. It was in the middle of Parkside Lane that we entered the corn field you can see in the video and the pictures below towards Ropley Village: it was quite surreal to ride in the middle of a corn corridor!

After Ropley, we had to find an alternative route because it was a footpath (rather than a bridleway) and the kissing gate was too narrow to get through with the bike (you can see the divergence on the map) – and we had to do the same again at the junction with Andrew’s Lane, this time because of a stile (which really wasn’t possible on a bike), diverting to Dunsell’s Lane and then Gascoigne Lane / Gilbert Street.

The same happened at Kitwood Lane (you may by now be sensing a theme…), because the kissing gate was very narrow and there was a clear sign asking people not to cycle on the footpath . The kissing gate in question is on the right of Kitwood Lane and, if you are cycling, I recommend you instead take the left at the fork where Swelling Hill becomes Kitwood Lane. I wish roads in England didn’t change names so often… Kitwood Lane becomes Alton Road at a five-way junction a few hundred metres further on. It’s all quite confusing, I know – but if you are English you’re probably used to it! The walkers’ path joins Alton Road about 1.3 km later, becoming a dirt path with trees on both sides that give the impression of being a green tunnel, which was rather lovely.

Just before the village of Chawton there is another kissing gate – but this one, thankfully, is manageable. After this you’ll be back on the A32. The walkers’ path leads to a set of steps on the other side of the road, which we decided to avoid, riding instead towards the roundabout and taking the Winchester Road exit. This will all lead you to Jane Austen’s house, which is now a museum and the point at which Katy does some talking in the video.

Now we were pretty much in Alton, but we got a bit confused navigating the urban roads – I think because Komoot (the app that I’ve been using) was guiding us through low-traffic roads rather than along the main road taken by the walkers’ path.

The picture gallery below shows the pictures taken by Katy and me as we left Winchester and along this stage. Click on any picture to enlarge.

I hope you enjoy the video and the photos .

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Stage 03: From the Alton House Hotel in Alton to the Bishops Table Hotel in Farnham.

If you haven’t done so already, please watch the video first and then read this blog for more detail! I didn’t want to include all this information in the video voiceover because it would have added too much to the length of the video (which is 9’06”).

The picture below was used in the video and I hope will help you make more sense of the text below.

PW-Stage-03-Alton-to-Farnham
Map of the stage between Alton and Farnham. The yellow line shows the downloaded walkers’ path and the red is the one I took on my bicycle.

As before, we didn’t stop in Alton as by this point it was already 17:15 and we were feeling the pressure of not wanting to arrive in Farnham in the dark. The walkers’ route seemed to want us to cross Alton Rugby Football Club but, looking at the grassy field, we decided not to cycle over it; thankfully it was easy to find the path on the other side of the pitch. This then took us past the Church of Holy Rood in the village of Holybourne where, in spite of being pressed for time, I couldn’t resist stopping and taking a picture (unfortunately the church itself was closed, as was so much in 2020). Further on, the path took us to some fields, one of which we would have chosen not to ride on, were we not so pressed for time: the soil had been prepared for planting and it was all uneven and, although the footpath is very clearly marked on the map going straight across (which of course we did), there was no obvious track on the ground. We consulted maps at the time and no sensible alternative appeared to be available without considerable back-tracking – but later, on closer inspection using Google Earth, there appears to be a forest track that leads to a dirt farm road. (I don’t actually know if that dirt road is open to the public, but anything would be preferable to crossing that field!) This dirt road would meet the walkers’ path just before the village of Upper Froyle, less than a kilometre away.

After Upper Froyle, trying to keep on the walkers’ path, we turned right onto Gid Lane, to find ourselves at a narrow kissing gate that also led to a farm field. Gid Lane ends at the A31, which is a very busy main road and we weren’t keen to ride on it – so we backtracked and continued in the direction of Lower Froyle, turning right towards the Anchor Inn pub and getting on a parallel road to the A31. I couldn’t find the name of this road, because strangely no roads in that area are named in Google Maps / Earth.

We made one last attempt to rejoin the walkers’ path by going up Pax Hill (you’ll see the photo of a white bike at the top of the hill), but that led to yet another narrow kissing gate, which wasn’t possible with bikes. So it was backtracking again for us, and we continued on the road parallel to the A31.

Arriving at the village of Bentley, we turned left onto Hole Lane, leaving the paved lane at a single track through some woods where I took pictures of wild pheasants that crossed our path. We had to climb a hill through a field of dried-out wheat stalks and the sunset at the point was quite spectacular – I should have stopped to take a picture, but you’ll get a glimpse of it in the video.

Then we were back on paved lanes, and passed a big solar farm on the right. At this point, Katy and I got separated for a few minutes, as she was a bit behind and our navigation systems were showing different routes so, after a quick phone call, I backtracked a few hundred metres and met her again on a single track heading towards Dippenhall. At this point we could have taken Crondall Lane for a more direct paved route to Farnham, but we decided to stick to the walkers’ path that took us along some nice dirt tracks up to Middle Old Park and Park Ln, arriving at Castle Hill right in front of Farnham Castle.

We arrived at the Bishops Table Hotel in Farnham much later than we expected, at around 19:45, just as dusk fell – but although the light was fading, it was still clear enough for my filming to be OK (this wasn’t the case in many of the following days of the pilgrimage, when it got dark before I finished riding!). We were tired, but very happy to have arrived and rewarded ourselves with some excellent dinner that night.

The picture gallery below shows the pictures taken by Katy and me as we left Winchester and along this stage. Click on any picture to enlarge.

I hope you enjoy the video and the photos.

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Introduction to the Pilgrims' Way

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Welcome to my Introduction to the Pilgrims’ Way blogs and video.

This post is a bit long, so if reading is not your thing I’ve also created an introduction video which contains some of the information contained here. This post, however, is more detailed and contains the high-res pictures used in the slideshow portion of the video.

If you rather watch the video before reading the post, here it is.

Still here? Good! – there is quite a lot of detail below that I had to cut out from the video as I couldn’t read it all in 10 minutes or less.

But before we move on, two things:

  1. Scallop-Shell-Classic-T-Shirt
    Classic T-Shirt – Scallop Shell Collection

    I’ve created three Pilgrims’ Way collections with different designs for T-shirts, mugs, phone cases, water bottles, pullovers and other items that pilgrims might find useful, will be able to wear or use during their pilgrimage, and keep as a memento after it.

    Click here to access the TeeSpring Pilgrims’ Way store

  2. I published a post on the 25 of August 2020 (a week before setting off) in which I introduce the pilgrimage and write about my plans. It might be a good idea to read that post before this one, if for no other reason than to compare before and after. I am not going to repeat here what I’ve already written in that previous post.

Please note that this post comes to you five months after the fact – but better late than never.

Winchester Cathedral from the air (rear side)
Winchester Cathedral from the air (east side)

Although this was the shortest cycling pilgrimage I’ve done, it was also one of the most unusual. That’s because there was a German TV crew following and “directing” me, capturing all sorts of video footage for a TV documentary about the Pilgrims’ Way that will be aired in Germany and France at some point in 2021.

On Sunday the 30th of August 2020, my girlfriend Katy and I cycled from Bracknell, where I live, to Winchester, a very enjoyable ride of nearly 65 Km. On arrival in Winchester,

the German TV crew was already waiting to record some made-up scenes, as if I was starting the pilgrimage that day, whereas in fact I set off the next day, a bank holiday here in the UK. After several takes in various places, the crew invited Katy and me for dinner in a local pub and after that we went back to the B&B we were staying in that night, just a few hundred metres from the cathedral grounds.

The next morning I flew the drone up from the B&B’s garden to capture some footage of the town and the cathedral. I wasn’t authorised to fly the drone over the cathedral grounds, but the German TV crew was (unlike me, their drone operator is a qualified pilot).

Before I could start the pilgrimage, we spent nearly two hours recording a number of video “takes” that challenged my really poor acting skills. They filmed me arriving at the cathedral on my bike, being greeted by Canon Andy Trenier, and receiving my pilgrim’s credential and the first stamp. They also captured the going-away blessing and then recorded me leaving the cathedral grounds. All of this meant we left Winchester much later than we had planned. Katy also cycled with me from Winchester to Farnham that day.

Four days later and many experiences and obstacles behind me, I found myself in Canterbury, again being greeted by the German TV crew for a series of takes of my arrival, receiving the blessing and the final stamp from Canon Emma Pennington, and recording some drone footage of cycling up the hill in the campus of the University of Kent at sunset. It wasn’t until the next day that I was able to fly my own drone up to capture some footage of Canterbury – and I did so over waters of the Great Stour river and over the fields of the river side trail between the village of Chartham and Canterbury, to minimize the potential of breaking any rules.

So, in this post, I’ll provide a summary of what these 4 days added to my life and I am going to divide this into 4 categories:

  1. Places
  2. Challenges
  3. People and
  4. Moments

OK, starting with places, before starting the pilgrimage I bought Leigh Hatts’ “Walking the Pilgrims’ Way” guide book as, as, to my knowledge, there isn’t a Pilgrims’ Way guide written specifically for cyclists, and it turns out there aren’t that many pilgrims who have done this pilgrimage by bike either. During my planning I also searched and downloaded a few GPX files I found online with walking routes taken by a few pilgrims.

The route of the Pilgrims’ Way typically follows a major landscape feature of southern England, the North Downs. This is part of a chalk ridge extending from the Ridgeway in the west to the white cliffs of Dover in the east and the major towns along the route are found where this ridge is broken by rivers such as the Itchen in Winchester, the Wey in Guildford and the Mole at Dorking. For the most part, the Pilgrims’ Way is on a terrace on the south of this ridge, where you’re going to come across several typical English villages, churches and pubs.

The spelling of many of the towns or villages is a bit of a tongue twister for a foreigner and, as it is often the case in England, you don’t pronounce the names as they are written. I dare you to try and then compare to what I say in the videos to come (I had to do my own research to try and get it right): Winchester, Alresford, Alton, Farnham, Guildford, Mertsham, Oxted, Otford, Wrotham, Halling (which I skipped), Aylesford, Harrietsham, Boughton Lees, Boughton Aluph, Chilham and Canterbury.
There are, however, stages that start or end in places other than a town or village, such as Box Hill

(although there is the village of Box Hill to the east of the summit as well). Box Hill is considered an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty by the National Trust of England and, at its peak, the 224m elevation is the highest single-day climb you’ll have to face on the entire journey, which is made more difficult by the stepping stones crossing over the River Mole and the 275 steps going uphill (not all of which were necessary to climb, thank God!).

Adding together all distances outlined in the guide results in a total distance of 222km (incl. Halling), but I rode a total of 244km on the four pilgrimage days. The additional 24km is due to detours where I could not get through with the bike or for route changes and various other reasons. There were several stages where my route took me close to the suggested start or end points given in the guide, but not exactly there. I’ve also had to skip the village of Halling, as I decided to ride straight to the Aylesford Carmelite Priory as the TV crew was waiting for me there . The picture below highlights the differences between the walkers’ route I dowloaded from the internet (in yellow) and the one I did (in red).

PW00-Intro-Pilgrims-Way-Route
Pilgrims’ Way Route: In YELLOW the walkers’ route I downloaded from the internet before I started the pilgrimage, in RED the one I actually took.

I created a time-lapse video for each stage I rode and will write at least one blog post for every day of the journey covering the stages I did that day.

As mentioned before, part of my plan was based on a GPS track I found and downloaded from the internet. It provided the route taken by a pilgrim on foot and from that I planned my four-day ride using an app called Komoot, making the changes for some of the deviations from the walking path that I already anticipated, but… oh, boy… if only I knew.

For me personally my ‘places’ highlights were:

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Challenges:

Having met Leigh in Canterbury the year before, I was fortunate to get in touch with him for some advice and support for my adventure. I was told (and already knew) this wouldn’t be an easy route to cycle on due to the existence of many Kissing Gates and stiles (something that those who live or have lived in the UK are probably familiar with). These are intentional barriers to contain livestock, but have

PW00-Intro-24
One of the many Kissing Gates along the route.

the unintentional result (one would presume) of being serious obstacles for bicycles also, even on tracks where riding a bicycle is allowed… yes, there are tracks exclusive for walkers where bicycles aren’t allowed and they’re are aptly named “footpaths”. I tried to stay away from these, but there were moments where the deviation was simply too big to justify, so I dismounted and pushed the bike. This gave me the idea of writing my own Pilgrims’ Way cycling guide… watch this space!

Still, even with all obstacles and the demands of a TV crew, I managed to cycle all the way to Canterbury more or less according to plan.

PW00-Intro-60
A stile, impossible to cross without lifting the bike.

The most challenging day of the four was without a doubt the second day. I left Farnham around 9:00am and had planned to ride roughly 75km. I knew it would be challenging, not only because of the greater distance, but because I had two hills to climb: Box Hill and Reigate hill, both over 260m elevation.

Still, I thought it was doable, as it would be a day entirely dedicated to riding, with no filming scheduled.

PW00-Intro-72

What I didn’t know was that the climb on Box Hill would be made pushing my bike up at least 150 steps. I also had to make several detours, as there was a larger number of kissing gates and stiles that I wasn’t able (or willing) to cross on my own and that would lead to footpaths, where cycling is not allowed anyway. All of this contributed to the fact that, after nine hours, I had ridden only 55km, little more than two-thirds of the way, trying my best to keep on the original walkers’ path. Of these nine hours, however, at least three hours must be taken off as time I used to take pictures, fly the drone (twice) and lunch, since I had no breakfast that day. As I got to the Inglis Memorial near Reigate the sun was already setting and I still had over 20km to ride to my final destination. I definitely didn’t want to ride on the gravel paths and dirt-tracks in pitch-black conditions, so at the car park after Reigate Hill, I had Komoot re-route the remaining third on an urban route on roads, but still I arrived at my destination (the Days Inn Hotel in Westerham, by the M25 motorway) in the dark at around 8:30pm that night.

The kissing gates and stiles were no doubt the biggest challenges along the way, even more than the hills. I have not counted the number of them, but they were numerous. Luckily, I was able to get through (or over) most of them, but there were a handful that were simply too narrow and I didn’t feel like throwing my bike over them by myself, so I had to stop following the original pilgrims’ path and find alternative routes in these situations.

PW00-Intro-80
Problem with the bike… lost one of the screws that fasten the rack to the frame

I also had a mechanical fault on the bike, which meant I had to go looking for a bike shop to try and fix it. I lost one of the screws that fastened the rack to the frame of the bicycle, probably due to the fact I was lifting the bike vertically all the time (to overcome the kissing gates) with the load still attached the rack. Katy indicated a bike shop in Kemsing to me, but I couldn’t find it (it appeared to be a home workshop with no signs), but I found a car garage and they were kind enough to provide a temporary fix by screwing the rack to the frame with a self-tapping screw, which might have damaged the frame, but it was better than a lose rack. This also meant a little detour and extra time, but gave me also the opportunity to get to a pharmacy for some lip balm for my dry lips.

Even with all the detours and challenges, my route closely matched the walking route for perhaps 85-90% when compared to the GPS track I downloaded from the internet and to Leigh Hatts’ guide. If my Pilgrims’ Way Cycling Guide becomes a reality, I will make sure the suggested route is appropriate for cycling and provides an enjoyable experience, because some of the walking paths are clearly unsuitable, or not even allowed, for cycling.

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People:

Some people were constant presences before, during and after this pilgrimage. Particular thanks to Katy for her help and support during this experience. She rode with me from Bracknell to Winchester, then did the first day to Farnham and after that kept in constant touch advising on possible alternatives and providing help to find a place to fix my bike problem (and, later, helping me work out how to pronounce some of the place names). Also, thanks are due to my good friend Fernando, who came to pick us up in Canterbury two days later.

PW00-Intro-111
From left to right: Izzy, Sven (sound), Mareike and Michael (cameraman)

Then there were the four members of the German TV crew: Izzy (who is actually Welsh and not German), Michael the cameraman, Sven the audio guy (and drone operator) and Mareike, the producer of the documentary. They are professionals, of course, with a specific job to do, but we were in constant contact through these days and we had some good laughs together, mostly as a result of me goofing around and my bad “acting” skills. My thanks also go to Canons Andy Trenier and Emma Pennington at Winchester and Canterbury cathedrals respectively, for their lovely blessings at the start and end of the pilgrimage, which isn’t something every pilgrim can benefit from. Joe Bailey is a member of the Winchester Cathedral staff and was coordinating with the TV crew, and videoed a reflection moment with Katy and me and posted it to the Cathedral’s YouTube channel. Then there was Christine Chantal and her husband, the owners of the B&B we stayed in Winchester the night before we started the journey – they are really lovely and warm-hearted people, and I hope they managed to do their planned sailing in Greece, despite Covid.

PW00-Intro-2
Left to right: Christine Chantal, me and Katy.

I encountered numerous people on the paths or roads of the Pilgrims’ Way, but very few pilgrims. To all the people that laughed at this crazy guy with a loaded bike struggling to get up Box Hill steps, when even on foot they were struggling… the laughs were on all of us, but trying to do that with a loaded bike made me feel very “special”. I encountered two gentlemen walking in Alton and I immediately knew they were pilgrims, not only for the rucksack and stick, but also because one of them was carrying Leigh Hatts’ Pilgrims’ Way guide. I also encountered two women pilgrims on a gravel patch after Otford and a couple touring on bikes (not pilgrims) whose destination was the west coast of England / Wales (still hundreds of miles away). Compared to the Camino de Santiago and other pilgrimages I’ve done, the Pilgrims’ Way is largely a lonely one, which might be something some pilgrims particularly enjoy.

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Moments:

It is not easy to select a few over so many in four days, and obviously “moments” are connected to places, people, experiences and challenges. So, in order not to repeat myself, the very first moment of note is when, months before the pilgrimage had even started, I decided I was going to do it and all the activities that followed that simple decision, like buying and reading the guide, the exchanges with the author and countless other people, and looking for information that could be relevant for a cycling (as opposed to walking) pilgrimage. Other moments – many of which I would not have been able to experience (because of Covid), were it not for the fact that I was taking part in a documentary:

  • Leaving Winchester Cathedral and arriving at Canterbury cathedral as mentioned before.
  • PW00-Intro-99My visit to the Carmelite Priory in Aylesford, the history lesson I had from the friar, and seeing the room I would have stayed in, if they hadn’t been closed due to the pandemic.
  • The blessing from Canon Emma at the cathedral’s high altar, right under the dome of Thomas Becket shrine, the spot he was murdered.
  • The singing Katy did there, filling the place with her wonderful voice.
  • The veggie burger at the Compasses Inn in Gomshall, at their riverside beer garden just before the climb to Box Hill.
  • The many moments of introspection riding by myself in the middle of the many forested pars of the North Downs way.
  • The drone-flying moments – with my continuous fear of messing it up and crashing causing a degree of stress.
  • The moment, a few kilometres before Lenham, that I realised I had fallen of my bike and hit my head, which I have no memory of (it’s a complete blank for about 10–15 minutes!).
PW00-Intro-134
Canterbury Cathedral

As I said, moments are numerous and associated with all three other categories, so it’s hard to pick just a few.

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So there you go: something about the places, challenges, people and moments of the Pilgrims’ Way.

To finish, you may be curious about things like detailed stats and cost. I’ve put a  Google Sheets spreadsheet

together, containing all my expenses itemised by day and type, as well as the telemetry from my Garmin Edge 810 cycling computer (distances, heart rate, calories, elevation gains, etc.

You can access it in Google Sheets directly or download it as an Excel spreadsheet (or CSV, etc), but altogether I rode 244.29km in four days between Winchester and Canterbury,

with an average heart rate of 143.75bpm, at an average speed of 13.10km/h, and there was a total 3,330m elevation gain. I also spent £290.34 in the four days – an average of £72.59 per day – and £478.43 in total when the overnights before and after the pilgrimage are included, making an average of £79.74 per day.

I hope this provides you with a good introduction about my experiences along the Pilgrims’ Way and entices you to keep following the series of videos and blog posts that will come over the next weeks.

I wish you all a “Buen Camino” – and stay safe!


Picture Gallery of the photos used in the introduction video

(Click on the picture to enlarge)

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