This is NOT a guide to 'The Hebridean Way'! Its an account of walking The Western Isles, South to North, 'My Way'.
I had decided to walk from Heilinish Point, the southern tip of Vatersay, to the Butt of Lewis. I then reseached and discovered about the Hebridean Way - learnt a lot from the detail, and decided that was not what I wanted. I wanted to walk from southernmost tip to northernmost tip, seeing sea on both sides when I could, following the highest ground as far as I could manage and walking off road wherever practicable.Heilinish Point, the southern tip of Vatersay, to the Butt of Lewis - 200 km "as the crow flies", but 400 km "as my boots walked" |
I left Gloucestershire in a small campervan on 4th May and arrived home on the 31st, having spent £500, plus food costs at supermarkets and local stores. (I couldn't price up the food since I took food from our pantry and on return had a lot of spare, non-perishable food left to return to the pantry.) I'd spent £280 on fuel; £101 on ferry fares; £98 on campsite fees, and £18 on bus fares.
My tale is a personal one, containing idiosycratic, planned as well as spontaneous, choices. The journey taken when aged 63, a hillwalker for almost 60 years. Well experienced in map-reading, using compass bearings, navigating in mist and cloud, triangulating my position from bearings off identifiable features on a map; I hadn't yet adopted the use of GPS and electronic maps, and I carried a whistle and the lightest weight mobile phone in case of emergency. My policy when walking solo on remote hills is to travel with care and caution - moving slowly without getting tired, particularly when assistance might be far away. I carried two sticks for off-track walking - a pair of lightweight Fizan poles, 160 g each, which have a combined weight comparable with one heavy duty walking pole. These are invaluable to ease the pain in a damaged knee-joint when descending, but also aid balance and safety, as well as allowing smoother and more efficient use of muscles when ascending. I also wore a knee brace with aluminium spiral stays and, using a variety of foot-arch supports, I swapped between a pair of Brasher Hillmaster GTX boots, with rather worn soles, and a pair of Meindl Bhutan's, ideal for difficult terrain but too heavy and clunky for long distances on road or firm trails. Only once did I resort to walking on a road in running shoes - much lighter and softer, but I prefer to protect my feet from the inevitable rain and bog-water.