Category: 2024 Walk

The Day After

From Our Weaknesses… Sometimes, it’s not a whole poem that gets me – a mere line can be enough. I was reading “She Teaches Lear” by Iain Crichton Smith. It’s not a poem that touches me particularly, but then the third line of the last verse smacked me right in the guts: “From our weaknesses …

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Day 14: Northwick to Stoke Gifford

Vets In 2017 I met a veteran in Bulawayo who was more or less destitute. He was living on a meal a day yet had served the UK and Empire all his military career. And he was dying of prostate cancer, and he couldn’t afford treatment. The services charities were more or less skint.  So …

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Day 13: Shepperdine to Northwick

A watery few days in beautiful scenery. Some of those who have hosted or walked with us (and they will, of course, remain anonymous) have related tragic stories of the conduct of their children or in-laws behaving cruelly towards them. Our friends are elderly and vulnerable and, in the main,  widows. In two cases, the …

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Day 12: Sharpness to Shepperdine

A friend tells me he is about to tell me a funny story. I want to tell him, “Just tell me the story…I ‘ll tell you if I find it funny or not,” but I haven’t the heart to do so. Victimhood Politicians of all stripes treat the electorate as babies. Social security benefits are …

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Day 11: Fretherne to Sharpness

Boris Johnson’s book about his premiership is published in October. Whatever he writes in his own defence, one thing is clear: he clearly didn’t have the self-awareness to be alert to his own failings. He should have known he was incapable of staff control. If he had been aware, he would have authorised a tough cabinet …

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Day 10:Upper Framilode to Fretherne

Last Meal We have been hosted by wonderfully kind and generous hosts, and we have enjoyed excellent, wide-ranging debates on, you name it, we have discussed it. Last evening, we chose what we would select as our last meal before we were to be shot! Here’s mine. First, a well-made Bloody Mary. It’s a sad …

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Day 9: Weir Green to Upper Framilode

Fortunately in the UK On July 4, something remarkable happened that we in the UK take for granted: power changed hands from one party to another. No one died, no one even argued about the process, and control changed peacefully…it just happened. What astonishes me is that at least one-third of the country just shrugged …

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Day 8: Sandhurst to Weir Green

Today’s walk was the worst by far: a boring landscape, overgrown paths, and we often walked beside the river that stank like a monkey’s latrine. The management of those responsible for this disaster should be made to pay for the damage they have done and the disposal of the sewage they have poured in the …

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Day 7: Tewkesbury to Sandhurst

We are standing on the shoulders of giants. Requiem for an Admiral We passed a memorial to Admiral Hopwood. No one has ever heard of him but now you know that he risked his life for his country through all the naval engagements of WW1. He is one of the twelve million servicemen who ran …

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Day 6: Rest Day

A couple of years ago and on a walk I banged on about the hordes of miserable looking couples who sit in total silence simply staring at the floor. Most are vast in bulk and potential incubators of diabetes, heart conditions, cancers and worse. Some are smoking and look as fit as a diesel dumper …

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