Highlights
Walk the eastern half of Wainwright’s legendary Coast to Coast trail
More relaxed itinerary splitting 2 long days between Richmond & Blakey
Explore the Pennines, Yorkshire Dales & North York Moors National Park
Follow the River Swale through villages to historic Richmond
Walk across the Vale of Mowbray into the North York Moors
Traverse heather-clad Blakey Ridge to the North Sea coast
Benefit from over 40 years’ expert Coast to Coast walking experience
Traverse heather-clad Blakey Ridge to the North Sea coast
Benefit from over 40 years’ expert Coast to Coast walking experience
Itinerary
Embark on the second section of Wainwright’s Coast to Coast with this 11-day walking tour from Kirkby Stephen to Robin Hood’s Bay—ideal for experienced travelers and seniors looking for moderate activity. This thoughtfully paced itinerary breaks up tougher sections, granting you extra time to savor the Yorkshire Dales, North York Moors, and charming market towns like Richmond. Traverse river valleys, climb the mystical Nine Standards Rigg, and make your celebratory entrance into Robin Hood’s Bay on the North Sea. The tour features cozy accommodations and highlights the diversity of England’s countryside and hospitality. The unique aspect is its relaxed pacing, allowing for deeper exploration and greater enjoyment of each destination.
day 1 - Arrive Kirkby Stephen
Make your own way to Kirkby Stephen on the edge of the Pennine Hills. You should have time to explore this pretty old market town with St. Stephen’s Church containing the 8th Century Loki stone relating to Norse Mythology. Or we recommend adding an extra night if you like to enjoy this town more. |
day 2 - Kirkby Stephen to Keld 24 km/14.5 miles, 6 h
It's your first day of this second half of Wainwright's Coast to Coast! Climb out of town to the cairns of Nine Standards Rigg (661m / 2170 feet) with its array of obelisks. This is an ancient, possibly, boundary feature that no one has any real knowledge of. It marks the Watershed of England. Next you cross squelchy moors down to Keld in Swaledale. The trail from the Nine Standards, once the most notorious of the Coast to Coast, has been much improved once again with the placement of hundreds of flagstones. Passing the farm at Ravenseat, where they breed prime rams, the moors then become increasingly gentler as you walk into Keld with its many waterfalls and old stone barns. /// The day’s total ascent 780m / descent 575m. |
day 3 - Keld to Reeth 20 km/12.5 miles, 5 h
There are two options today. >> The first is the slightly longer & higher alternative over wild moorland with long-abandoned lead mines, a magnet for the industrial archaeologist.
>> The second option is the pretty route via Swaledale, which is a lovely option if you have unfavourable weather or you just prefer a lower level walk. There is a really nice pub in Gunnerside on this second route.
Your day finishes in Reeth, an attractive green village which flourished at the height of the mining age and today does well out of tourism, hence a collection of pubs and tea shops. // The day’s total ascent 838m / descent 911m (via the higher route). |
day 4 - Reeth to Richmond 20 km /12.5 miles, 5 h
our morning walk is through pretty Swaledale up the Nun's Steps to Marrick and across farm land to the hamlet of Marske and its attractive church of Edmund the Martyr. The route continues along a valley side lined with limestone crags and through forest reaching Richmond with plenty of time for shopping (note most shops closed Sunday) & sightseeing. This extremely picturesque North Yorkshire town, with its cobbled market square and Norman castle, is an ever-popular destination for visitors. You can also follow the Swale to Town Falls, which are quite impressive when the river is in spate.// The day's total ascent 395m / descent 510m. |
day 5 - Richmond to Danby Wiske 22.5 km/14 miles, 5 h
A gentle rural day, walking out from Richmond beside the River Swale and across the fields to Catterick Race Course. You'll then be threading your way to Brompton on Swale, an ideal lunch stop in the churchyard. You then trundle along beside tiny streams and quiet country roads reaching the village of Danby Wiske with its village green and single pub offering great home cooked food. |
day 6 - Danby Wiske to Osmotherley 16 km/10 miles, 3.5 h
Today has road walking and cross country sections. Then with the North York Moors pressing ever closer you have to carefully cross the main A19 road into Ingleby Cross, which has a popular coffee shop. From here you take a steep but lovely woodland footpath up into the old Flax industry village of Osmotherley. On the way you may want to visit the restored Lady chapel in its tranquil setting. Osmotherley is a quaint hill village with three pubs to choose from plus Britain’s oldest functioning Methodist Church (1754) - John Wesley came to preach here. |
day 7 - Osmotherley to Clay Bank Top Car Park 17 km/10.6 miles, 6 h
This is a roller coaster walk. A steep stretch from Osmotherley introduces you to the North York Moors and its sandy, heather-clad hills with areas of forest. After coming off Scarth Wood Moor, there is a long ascent up Live Moor and Carlton Bank (408m) before we descend to Lord Stones Café. It's almost hidden in an off-road embankment and comes at the right time for coffee. There then follows the succession of Cringle Moor, Broughton Bank and White Hill - all at or over 400m. You loose and then re-ascend 100-200m between each one. White Hill has an area of sandstone boulders called The Wainstones that we thread through on the way up. Great views in clear weather, incl. Roseberry Topping, Vale of Mowbray and back to the Pennines. We come off the ridge at Clay Bank Top and you will get a transfer to your accommodation (included) from the car park at Clay Bank Top to Great Broughton. |
day 8 - Clay Bank Top Car Park to Blakey 13.8 km/8.6 miles, 4.5 h
You will be transferred back to the car park (included). Today, the walk follows a moorland ridge up over Round Hill (454m) and the track maintains its height as it follows the line of the old dismantled Rosedale Railway line. The moor can be bleak in bad weather and is punctured in places by standing stones, some marked with inscriptions. There are enticing views at times into the fertile upper valleys of Farn and Esk dales, but your arrival at the ancient Lion Inn at Blakey can be a great relief. |
day 9 - Blakey to Egton Bridge or Grosmont 16 km/10 miles, 4 h
After a bit of a road perambulation past a white cross called Fat Betty, you follow an easy undulating descent down to beautiful wooded Eskdale. You also get some views opening up to the sea. The latter part of today's walk follows a pretty path through the woodlands on the banks of the River Esk. You come across the ‘Beggars Bridge’ a parabolic stone structure that has a story of love lost and love refound! Egton Bridge features a church with relics of the Catholic martyr, Nicholas Postgate. A really pretty setting, the river is famous for fly fishing and has some interesting stepping stones, which enables you to hop between the two pubs faster than using the road. // The day’s total ascent 265m / descent 616m. |
day 10 - Egton Bridge or Grosmont to Robin Hood's Bay 25.7 km/16 miles, 7 h
You follow a delightful, private road to Grosmont, where you might want to try and get in time to see a steam train pull out for Pickering. You then follow a very steep pull up across heather moors with views down to Whitby and its Abbey. But the sea and journey’s end is still tantalizingly far as the route abruptly changes course to visit the May Beck valley with its Falling Foss waterfall. A last area of high moor brings you to the coast, where the last 5 km/3 miles are spent on the coastal cliff path to Robin Hood's Bay. It will appear almost by surprise as you near it. This is a village of red-roofed houses clustered around its harbour on the North Sea coast marking the end of this 190 odd-mile crossing of England. Celebrate with a drink at the Bay Hotel. // The day’s total ascent 775m / descent 770m. |
day 11 - Arrangements end after brekfast
Your Coast to Coast walking experience concludes in Robin Hood's Bay after breakfast.

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