About this blog

The journey from John o'Groats to Land's End took place in 14 sections, starting in 1996 (a week or so each year). The idea came to me in 1995 and I completed the British JoGLE Watershed in June 2009.

I was joined by a number of relations and friends from time to time. Most notable among my walking companions were my son Tim (7 sections) and nephews Peter and Jonny.

After walking the first section in 1996 I discovered that Dave Hewitt had already pioneered the Scottish Watershed (to Cape Wrath) in 1987, and had published his excellent account Walking the Watershed in 1994. We have been in touch since then, and he has been a great encouragement.

A simple definition of the watershed is that any rain falling to the left of the path finishes in the North Sea or English Channel, and anything to the right flows into the Atlantic Ocean, the Irish Sea or the Bristol Channel.

I believe that this was the first walk along the full length of the British JoGLE Watershed. I became aware just after I completed the journey that the late Mike Allen walked a slightly different version (from Land's End to Cape Wrath) between 1988 and 1994, so he will have covered the same ground apart from the most north-easterly 220km.

There have subsequently been several walks and publications about parts of the JoGLE watershed, including Peter Wright's 2010 Ribbon of Wildness account of his Scottish section walked in 2005, which has brought the subject of watershed walking in the UK to a wider audience.

I hope you enjoy this blog. I'm planning to publish a full account in 2013/4. A summary of the walk appeared in The Angry Corrie volume 76 in 2009.

Malcolm Wylie.

Saturday 22 July 2000

Day 54 - two become three

My nephew Jonny was due to join us for the following few days, and we'd arranged to meet him in Moffatt this afternoon.

The morning started bright, with good views to begin with. I took this photo of a Saltire in the sky above the aptly-named Rotten Bottom. We then climbed into mist over Firthhope Rig (800m) - onto map 79 - and Lochcraig Head. It cleared as we descended towards Loch Skeen, and then down to the A708 at Birkhill.

Hitching was problematic, but we managed meet Jonny in Moffatt at last at 6pm. The taxi he'd taken from Lockerbie took us all back up to the Watershed, and we resumed walking at 7:15pm.

After a stiff ascent of Herman Law we turned SW towards Andrewhinney Hill, camping on Mid Rig at 202143.

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