![]() South Downs Way - Day 1A Chapter by mick weller![]() the first 9 miles![]()
South Downs Way - Day 1 A KNEE TREMBLER REMEMBERED Being unsure of the ‘official’ start, I asked the over-zealous thick-set council man who had just inadvertently binned the supper of some kids playing nearby - "How was I to know...?" he reasoned with parents who had complained, "...looked just like any other rubbish to me..." Unfazed, he pointed with his litter picker and told me that the Way began at the foot of the Downs, not by the pier as I had suggested.
At the pier entrance I noted my start time: 19:21, and scribbled: 'chips ok, Haddock tasty but small - not Proper Bo.'
From time to time I stopped to look back over Eastbourne. An elderly man on the coach from London had told me that the block of flats should never have been granted planning consent. 'It's a complete eyesore,' he had said. In his absence, I had to agree: it does stand out like a sore thumb.
It was here among the scrub and bushes 25 summers before that we picked plump wild raspberries but none were to be seen on this balmy evening.
Many places here are roped-off for safety - more precautionary than deterrent to the determined I supposed for this area is noted for being something of a suicide alley. The cliffs overhang in places and it's a sheer drop to the beach. Not a good place for vertigo sufferers!
Farther along the cliff top the Belle Tout light all but teeters on the edge. Next day, I met a local who told me that years before this whole structure had been jacked-up 'en masse' and moved back from the crumbling chalk. Now, he said, it was due to be moved again - giving a whole new meaning to the phrase 'moving house' as the lighthouse is now a private residence. Beachy Head Info link http://www.eastbourne.org/tourism/beachyhead/ With spectacular blood-orange views through misty shades of sunset, I continued onward to drop down to Birling Gap. By now it was 9pm and time to make my first call home. ***** After a swift pint (and £2.70! lighter), I took to the trail again intent on out-pacing the dark. Getting back into a steady rhythm, I was dive-bombed by some large flying insects that sounded like a cross between a wrist blood pressure monitor and a doodlebug. Were they beetles, moths or what I couldn’t tell? I had never seen anything like them. Either I was in their way or they were very curious and I wasn't sure if they either bit or stung, nor did I want to find out! They swarmed over the stiles and the monument over the next rise was given a wide berth as it was completely covered in the things.
With the ups and downs of the Seven Sisters (name given to the cliff peaks, as viewed from the sea), I felt the benefit of training for this walk; more so that I had worked long and hard at getting my gear weight down, with minimalism being the key. Years before I had toiled along this cliff top walk with my girlfriend - each of us carrying nearly 3 times as much stuff - the steep downhill stretches becoming a much more mundane form of knee trembling experience than had been anticipated! Carrying only 12.5lb now though - (no water carried as yet), I ‘skipped’ along with enjoyable ease to the country park.
Returning to my small tent I made out a shadowy figure moving suspiciously in the darkness - the gentle ‘clink’ of tent poles though quickly confirmed yet another late arriver.
Snug in my sleeping bag - cosy with warm glow from the tea light, voices could be heard gradually growing louder and I soon realised that my efforts to keep quiet had been in vain. The occupants of the two tents were returning, from the Pub presumably, laughing and giggling. As I had pitched near to the stile entrance, we exchanged goodnights as they climbed over.
With the size of their tents, the walk to the pub and back was about as far as they would be going I realised. But good luck to them, each to their own... remind yourself - you were once young too...
...they eventually quietened down sometime after midnight.
I didn't hear so much as another ‘clink’ from the other late comer, just the occasional hoot of a hungry owl as the silent white portent moon crested the hill. © 2009 mick wellerFeatured Review
Reviews
|
Stats
281 Views
2 Reviews Added on August 27, 2008 Last Updated on January 24, 2009 Author![]() mick wellerUnited KingdomAbout...and so it became interesting to write about the mundane - maybe master of the short story Guy-de-Maupassant's tale 'The Piece of String' was a pivotal experience... ha ha. http://www.online-liter.. more..Writing
Related WritingPeople who liked this story also liked..
|