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What was Beating the Bounds?

This summer Slow Ways is introducing a new tradition with old roots, the Great Slow Ways Waycheck

The waycheck is a ‘new tradition’ based on the old tradition of beating the bounds, where locals walked the boundaries of their parishes. This encouraged them to know the land with their feet, plus claim it and establish it, in the days before reliable maps were readily available. The public ceremony refreshed residents and neighbours’ memories of parish boundaries, through the physical act of walking. (There are still some places where beating the bounds is practiced, as seen in this article from the Open Spaces Society).

For many people in Britain in times gone by, the village in which you were born was likely to be where you lived and died: you would be baptised, married and buried in the same church. The church was the cornerstone of the parish, and the parish and community were coterminous.

Walkers in Eastry in a modern Beating the Bounds, 2010. geograph.org.uk

There aren’t many people who would ever agree we should go back to such a system. Young people leave their hometowns and head for cities, while others yearn to escape the cities for picturesque rural communities. Although in the past only the wealthy could afford horses, now bikes, cars, buses and trains make it easy to leave your home parish, even if only for the day. Some say this means a lack of connection to our communities, but taking the time to walk together can help strengthen those bonds.

A modern Beating the Bounds ceremony in Cambridge – geograph.org.uk

In traditional beating the bounds ceremonies, nobles from the town would walk the boundaries, accompanied by a few young boys. The reason for the youthful accomplices was so that someone would be in attendance who would live to remember the ceremony in years to come. Unfortunately for the boys, the ceremony sometimes involved not just beating the grounds with tree boughs, but also the boys receiving a beating as well. No doubt they were happy to see modern surveying techniques and reliable maps make the practice obsolete.

Those beating the bounds were translating physical reality into shared memory, but we now face a different problem.

We can commit to walking every Slow Way until every place in Britain has at least one verified route connecting it to any other place. That GIS-powered modern map is then saved in the cloud and accessible by all on the Slow Ways website and app, but if we don’t check over these routes regularly, it will become an unreliable resource. The routes will exist in digital form only, and those attempting to walk them may find them to be outdated; overgrown, built over or otherwise altered.

Morris Dancers marking the Beating of the Bounds, 2004. Wikimedia

There is only one way to check if these routes are suitable for walking: they must be walked. Slow Ways has already done amazing things, reconnecting people to paths they may have never been aware of in their local areas. With the Waycheck, we are asking walkers to commit to renewing their knowledge of the routes every year, and in doing so keep the Slow Ways network up to date, and keep paths open for us all to enjoy.

Join the Great Slow Ways Waycheck today. (yng Nghymraeg) To learn more, visit JSTOR Daily: Beating the Bounds and Historic Royal Palaces: Beating the Bounds. You can also find and follow us on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook

Review of the week: Renfrew — Glasgow (Rengla two) by Jane Taylor

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Each week our Stories Editor highlights a unique review left by a volunteer that speaks to the spirit of Slow Ways

Editors note: We are often checking routes and the progress made in different areas. Whilst doing so we come across great reviews, which come in all shapes and sizes, by our volunteers — some are short and to the point, others are humorous, historical or personal. Together they provide a full picture of a route for the next walker.

This week I was drawn to a review of Renfrew — Glasgow (Rengla two) by Jane Taylor. Rengla two, is a colourful adaption of Rengla one, drawn by the reviewer Jane. There are many things to love about this review: it’s light, fun, entertaining and informative. Jane’s journey (and review) captures the freeness that comes with urban wandering together with the intentionality of route checking. I really appreciated the additional information on local gems (from The Hidden Lane to the old-fashioned kilt shop) as well as the interesting and odd facts that bring the route to life (on pigeon lofts and ‘the bridge that goes nowhere’). Thank you Jane! This is one for my waylist.

Rengla two review
Jane Taylor

I was walking Rengla one from Renfrew to Glasgow, and got a bit fed up with the road slog along South Street; I could see the cafes and shops on Dumbarton Road through the A814 underpass and thought ‘why not? maybe a better route option over there?’. Well I was right!
This is now a full on funky five star route! Here’s what happened.

Getting the ferry

From Renfrew to the ferry, 10 minutes. The ferry is a tiny passenger walk on boat, it cost £2 cash only. The ferryman runs on demand, it’s daytime only, and before you set off check he’s running, just in case!

The north side of the Clyde is Yoker. There is a good row of local shops, especially noteworthy is the wonderful old-fashioned kilt shop on the corner, MacGregor and MacDuff, Kings of Kilts. Buy your new walking kilt here!

Before long, the route turns into a long, off-road cycle and pedestrian path for about 4km directly towards Glasgow.

A path of pigeon lofts

There are a number of pigeon lofts along this path. The lofts are known as ‘dookits’ and the pigeon fanciers are ‘doomen’. It’s a competitive hobby, which involves luring your rival’s pigeon into your loft, and it is on the wane, which is good news for the pigeons, less good for local tradition.

At around the 5km mark the route drops out onto the main road. But not for long as soon I turned off to greet the shops, cafes and pubs of the Dumbarton Road, which is the main strip through Partick. I really enjoyed walking along this road, lots of variety and a buzzy feeling. I ate my picnic at Mansfield Park which is nothing to do with Jane Austen.

A brief detour down The Hidden Lane

Before long I was crossing the river Kelvin, and then I couldn’t resist a visit to Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum, free entry, cafe, toilets, and lots to see.

The walk into central Glasgow passes through Finnieston which has a lively arts and crafts community. I passed an alleyway with a sign ‘The Hidden Lane’, so of course I had to walk down to see what is there, it is well worth a detour for the various studios, a brewery, and cafe, all in a courtyard warren of tiny houses behind the main street.

I am starting to think that no walk into central Glasgow is complete without at least one elaborate motorway crossing point, this time it is the Anderston Bridge across the M8. The Anderston Bridge was for many years infamous as the ‘bridge that goes nowhere’, because when the M8 was built the bridge was started but not finished, leaving the community in Anderston cut off from central Glasgow by the motorway. Eventually campaigns to complete the bridge succeeded, and it now provides an efficient walking and cycling route into central Glasgow from the west.

I really enjoyed this route and would definitely walk it again.

Check out more reviews of the month here. Want to help us grow the network of verified walking routes? Why not sign up to walk and review Slow Ways. You can also find and follow us on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook

Eltham to Woolwich – friendship, finitude and… fintech?

Life-long friends, Saira and Aisha embark on an eventful walk in South London, taking in a palace, bluebell-filled woods, and bustling markets while talking tech, investment and times gone by…

On a sunny Sunday morning in spring, I went on a walk from Eltham to Woolwich (Eltwood 3) with my friend Aisha. What better way to catch-up than checking a Slow Ways route and exploring new places?

On our journey, we visited the strange and wondrous Eltham Palace, walked through beautiful bluebell-filled Oxleas woods, enjoyed views across London and Kent from Shooters Hill, appreciated the most manicured gardens either of us had ever seen and enjoyed lunch at a small Vietnamese café in bustling multicultural Woolwich.

Further on, we opened gates that looked like they were locked and travelled down earthy stairs. We took in the skyline of mismatched Victorian chimneys, housing blocks and shiny new developments from various high places. We admired the effortlessly cool outfits worn by West African worshippers. As we went, we chatted, and we argued and we laughed. It felt like 2013 again.

Aisha and I have known each other for over a decade. In our early twenties – post-recession, broke and between jobs, we would spend our days going on long country hikes and unlikely urban wanders.

In the years that followed our lives converged and diverged at various points – Aisha got a job at the Guardian, then Buzzfeed and Al-Jazeera. She travelled the world and settled for a while in Doha, then New York before returning to London where she now works as a Fintech reporter for Bloomberg.

Meanwhile, I lived what felt like a dozen lives in a dozen places… and I walked… a lot…

   

The interesting thing about long-term friendships is the sense familiarity and consolation they offer – a deep sense of knowing. You know each other in a way you can only know someone with time – when you’ve been there during big life changes, through ups and downs, struggles and successes. When you’ve witnessed every version of each other. And you know that however far you drift away from one another, you’ll always find your way back. You’ll feel like you again, in their company, you’ll feel at home.

However far you drift away from one another, you’ll always find your way back

On our walk, once we had mostly caught up, Aisha asked me a string of questions on Slow Ways related to finance and tech (many of which -admittedly- I didn’t know the answers to). I asked her about shares and investments, her latest stories and whether we would ever be able to afford to buy in the city we grew up in.

It felt very different to the conversations we would share in our early hikes. Back then we’d often talk about boys and wanting to leave London. Now on the cusp of our mid-thirties – (older, not necessarily wiser – but striving, ever-striving) it feels like our friendship has entered a new era and that we’ve both turned a corner. We’re no longer chasing success or our ideas of success. Instead, we’re looking more towards gaining a sense of peace, and grounding – we’re seeking out and creating communities in which we can just be.  

I remembered one such community as we spoke about South London and the joy and challenges of being back in a city we both love. I reminisced about my weekly meetings with Nepalese elders in nearby tropical Bostall Gardens in Abbey Wood. I’d spend long afternoons filming and singing and weaving – speaking broken Hindi, taking photographs and capturing stories as part of a project I was working on. At the end, the film I’d made with a friend was screened in Woolwich Community centre – there was so much laughter, and warmth – there was dancing and food. Woolwich, in another life, felt like home.

And this, we decided is what we needed to do: we needed to make London home again. For me, a big part of that comes from exploring, meeting new people, traversing spaces, and finding belonging in them.

And this, we decided is what we needed to do: we needed to make London home again

In some ways, walking the route from Eltham to Woolwich felt like a homecoming – I got to spend time with a close friend, explore new hidden gems and discover an area of London that I long wanted to visit. I got to fall in love with my city again.

Are you planning a catch-up with a friend? Why not combine a route-check with a fun day out? Sign sign up to walk and review Slow Ways. You can also find and follow us on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook

Safety tips for walkers

Whether you’re traipsing a well-documented path or you’re the first reviewer on a Slow Ways route, there are always things you should keep in mind to be safe when out walking

The routes of the Slow Ways network were designed by volunteers, and, especially if you are one of the first reviewers, making sure a route is safe is not just important for you, but for everyone who follows it in your stead. Reviewers are looking for routes which are safe, accessible, and direct. 

Safety concerns for walkers will differ depending on the environments you walk through. Below, we’ve outlined a few things to be aware of when walking in towns and cities, when walking through open country, and when walking on country roads. 

Know the route before you set out

Research the route before walking

Distance: Be aware of the distance of a route, especially in regards to your fitness level, gear, experience and your companions on the walk. Consider starting with a shorter route — this will give you insight into what you might need to take with you on a more substantial walk, and what is best left behind.

Terrain: Satellite views (Bing Maps is particularly good for this) will give you an idea of what footwear to bring — make sure to look at topography as well.

Environment: Google Street View remains an amazing companion for checking the quality of roads that appear on your route. Are you and your companions up to the challenge of a walk along a pavement-less country road? 

Amenities: Usually listed, but if you’re one of the first reviewers this may be up to you to find out. Are there toilets on the route or places to purchase refreshments? Are there public transport stops, and if so how often do services run?

Emergency plan: Be aware of escape routes to nearby roads. Tell someone your plans and carry with you details of an emergency contact. What3Words is an app which may be useful for sending someone your location (such as the emergency services).

Know your limits when walking

Fitness level: If this is your first big walk in some time, you may be surprised how tired you can get. Start short, get longer. This also applies to how you feel when out on your walk. Sometimes, it’s good to listen to a gut feeling.

Kit: What are you wearing? Do have the right shoes and outdoor wear for the weather and terrain? Have a read of this guide to choosing hiking clothes. What are you carrying? You might want to consider packing the following items: food, water, battery pack, printed map, locator beacon.

Companions: Who are you walking with? Have you considered their abilities and needs? For example, if you’re walking with a group of children or animals, you may need to consider their needs, abilities and propensity for long walks as well as your own.

Safety when walking in towns and cities

Be aware of your surroundings

Slow Ways can lead you through all sorts of different places. Make sure you’re aware of your changing surroundings and if you feel unsafe do not hesitate to turn back.

Safety when walking in the countryside

Roads 

Drivers often speed through country roads. Walk in the direction of oncoming traffic, which in the UK means walking on the right-hand side. If there is a grassy verge, walking on that may be preferable to the road. If the route contains a lot of roads with fast oncoming traffic, tight hedges and blind bends, it may not be safe for people. 

Get to know the countryside code.

Fields 

Just as with a road, stop, look and listen before entering a field. Observe how bulls, or cows with calves, are behaving. Avoid walking between a grown animal and its young.

If you have a dog with you, keep it on a short leash around cattle and sheep. If the animals become aggressive, be prepared to release your dog so that you can both reach safety separately. Most importantly, don’t panic or run. 

Overgrown paths

You might like to carry a pair of secateurs with you on a walk, in case you come across brambles that block your path.

Considerations when reviewing a Slow Ways walk

  • Was the route easy to follow?
  • Did you feel comfortable? 
  • Would you recommend the route to others? 
  • Would a large group eg. a family be able to follow the same path?
  • Is the route drawn accurately?

Your safety is more important than completing a Slow Way. We hope you have a safe and enjoyable walk, but if you do come across any of
these dangers please mention them in your review. If need be you can flag the route as unsafe, inaccessible, or inaccurate. This will help out the next person!

Are you looking for a new walking challenge? Sign up to walk and review Slow Ways. You can also find and follow us on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook

Review of the week: Gravesend — Rochester (Graroc one) by Daisy C

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Each week our Stories Editor highlights a unique review left by a volunteer that speaks to the spirit of Slow Ways

Editors note: We are often checking routes and the progress made in different areas and come across great reviews, which come in all shapes and sizes, by our volunteers — some are short and to the point, others are humorous, historical or personal. Together they provide a full picture of a route for the next walker.

This week my attention was caught by a review of Gravesend — Rochester (Graroc one) by Daisy C. I was particularly struck by the balance this reviewer maintained between sharing key coordinates and instructions with almost lyrical observations of natural wildlife and pastoral scenes “heaving with nature”. The reviewer doesn’t shy away from the frustrations or the difficulties of the route (a familiar feeling for any experienced Slow Ways reviewer) but ultimately perseveres and surprises themselves. I’d hoped to walk this route myself and feel all the more equipped to do so now. Thank you Daisy C for such a thorough and informative review!

Gravesend — Rochester

Daisy C

I’m tempted to give this route 5 stars as I loved walking along the Thames and Medway Canal so much, and the other rural sections were pretty great too. But I can’t justify it as the route was too wet to actually walk at one point, although that was probably seasonal. I did not enjoy the Rochester end either, some route choices were strange and quite frustrating.

Starting at Gravesend

I avoided the Thames Path section as I thought it was closed until August. Using Albion Terrace and Raphael Rd was the quiet alternative I found as Milton Rd had loud HGV traffic. But the Kent Council footpath map suggests it has reopened now. Oh well.

i had a full surround-sound experience

The Thames and Medway Canal section really was wonderful. The canal is naturalised with deep waterside vegetation, unmown and scrubby edges plus another long ditch (more reeds) on the other side of the path. The path and surface was very good – perhaps as it’s Sustrans NCN route 1. Views across the marshes on either side are beautiful. Absolutely heaving with wildlife too, white clouds of cow parsley and hawthorn blossom.

It was very peaceful but I had a full surround-sound experience: noisy warblers and whitethroats, interruptions from cuckoos and pheasants, and occasional outbursts from an incredibly loud marsh frog chorus. Across the marshes I could see nesting lapwings and waterfowl, a hunting marsh harrier and later semi-wild ponies with very young foals.

A re-route

The onwards route towards Church St was also lovely, blue forget-me-nots lining the wooded parts and then down onto the grazing marsh. But… it got soggier and soggier until, at TQ 7121 7404 after the level crossing, there was no way to skirt around. I had to turn back. Canal Road was wide though; heavy vehicles but light traffic. There were even more crazy frogs plus calling peacocks.

I went back up to Church Street then, to see the wet path from the other end. Couldn’t get close, too wet from near ‘the bridge’ at TQ 7132 7417 (an underwater plank). A friendly local said “we get walkers streaming through here in the summer” and that the water is just high after a wet winter and spring.

Beyond Church Street is arable and more horses, skylarks were singing and as the ground began to rise there were good views behind me. From here onwards, some paths were fairly overgrown, more cow parsley and other annual vegetation but some nettles. At two field boundaries the path goes through an arch in a hedgerow, hard to spot until close. The route line at Lower Rochester Rd is a little wrong too which doesn’t help, it should be staggered like the public footpaths.

The steep valley after Hermitage Rd was also lovely although the traffic noise once you get close to the A289 was very striking after the sense of peace up until then.

From the A289 to Brompton Farm Rd was pleasant, especially the light and shadows on the narrow path between trees. I’m not sure what the earlier reviewer meant about a shorter way here. We all have different points of view!

Within Strood and Rochester I enjoyed the footpath beside the allotments, but couldn’t understand the rest of the route. Lots of noisy busy roads, a view of the distant motorway bridge not towards Rochester Castle and the Cathedral (try Cliffe St?). Going past Strood Station and a corner shop didn’t make it worthwhile.

North vs South

At Rochester Bridge do cross over the road to the south side. The views along the Medway are lovely but the north side was awful. You could change your route even earlier and approach the bridge using SolRoc 1, the waterside section, with its reflected lights, which was wonderful at dusk.

After the bridge you could stay south and swap the main road for Rochester High St then the La Providence footpath: very historic and beautiful with many restaurants, pretty shops, etc.

the waterside section, with its reflected lights,
was wonderful at dusk

If the Thames Path is still blocked and you use the official Milton Rd diversion this route has about 5km (3 miles) of road walking on primary or secondary (and cement plant access) roads. You could detour mid-route to Higham Station, or the shop in Higham village, or the Stone Horse pub on Dillywood Lane, each is only about 1km off-route. From the pub there’s also a shorter way into Strood on a road but with a proper pavement.

I’m so pleased that testing Slow Ways finally got me out to see these marshes, and I’d thought walking the canal would be a bit monotonous. It was a great time of year to go. And maybe my grumpiness in Strood and Rochester was coloured by my wet and chilly feet. I’d probably have turned back sooner if I wasn’t guinea-pigging it. I would like to go back, with the excuse of testing out a better Slow Way route, but I’d probably try the soggy bit again, both ends were worth it.

Want to help us grow the network of verified walking routes? Why not sign up to walk and review Slow Ways. You can also find and follow us on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook

Urban walk with Magid Magid

As activist and former Lord Mayor of Sheffield, Magid Magid, settles into London life he shares his review of “the ultimate trek” – Streatham to Crystal Palace

As I set off on my latest urban adventure, my thoughts turned to the great wanderers of our time: Wordsworth, Thoreau, and of course, Forrest Gump. But today, I was following in the footsteps of a different kind of icon: the great British walker. Yes, I was embarking on the ultimate trek from Streatham to Crystal Palace.

First things first, let’s talk about the name Streatham. Is it just me or does it sound like a verb? Like, “I was feeling a bit down, so I decided to Streatham my way through it.” Or maybe it could be a noun, like “I need to pick up some Streatham from the chemist.” Who knows!

Streatham is known for its diverse community, and the high street reflects that with a range of different shops and restaurants. As you walk down the street, you might hear the sounds of reggae music blasting from a Caribbean restaurant or catch a whiff of delicious Ethiopian cuisine wafting from a nearby eatery. Whatever your taste, you’re bound to find something that tickles your fancy.

As we continue on our way, we pass by a few notable landmarks, such as the Odeon Cinema, which has been standing since 1932. Fun fact: it’s said to be haunted by the ghost of a former manager, who likes to move things around and generally cause mischief. I like to think of him as the Casper of Streatham.

As we cross over into Norwood, we start to ascend the hill towards Crystal Palace. This is where things get interesting. For one, I started to see more and more dogs being walked by their owners. And not just any dogs, mind you — we’re talking Great Danes, Irish Wolfhounds, and other breeds that are the size of small ponies. It’s like a canine version of Jurassic Park.

Speaking of animals, we will also be passing by the famous Crystal Palace Park, which is home to a menagerie of exotic creatures such as parrots, flamingos, and emus. And let’s not forget about the dinosaurs. Yes, you read that right. There are “life-size” models of prehistoric creatures scattered throughout the park, including a 90-foot-long replica of a diplodocus — something I’m sure children would love.

As you make your way towards Crystal Palace, the city begins to fade away, replaced by lush greenery. Trees are tall and majestic, their leaves rustling gently in the breeze. It is a natural oasis, a place to escape the hustle and bustle and find peace.

But this peace is short-lived, as the greenery begins to give way to the urban jungle once more. The streets are narrow and winding, lined with row houses and small shops. The people are friendly, but wary, as if they know something you don’t. And they do — this is a place where anything can happen, like witnessing a man walking three ferrets on a leash or being asked to help move a sofa into a house, which I of course agreed to.

As I continued northward, the surroundings gradually shifted again, becoming more suburban and residential in character. The houses became smaller and more modest, but no less charming for it.

Whether you’re a lifelong Londoner or a visitor looking for a taste of the city’s unique magic, a walk from Streatham to Crystal Palace is an experience not to be missed

And then, suddenly, I was there — Crystal Palace. In the past it would have risen before you, a majestic structure of glass and steel, a testament to human ingenuity and creativity. The view is breathtaking, a panorama of the city that stretches out to the horizon. It’s the perfect place to catch your breath, have a drink and take it all in. And who knows, maybe you’ll even spot a ghostly figure or two lurking around.

It was a fitting end to a truly delightful walk. I had begun my journey with some trepidation, unsure of what lay ahead. But what I found was a London that was full of surprises and delights, full of character and charm at every turn. Whether you’re a lifelong Londoner or a visitor looking for a taste of the city’s unique magic, a walk from Streatham to Crystal Palace is an experience not to be missed.

Have a look at Magid’s first ever Slow Ways walk from Sheffield to Swallownest here.

Are you ready for a hike through the city? Why not sign up to walk and review Slow Ways. You can also find and follow us on Instagram, Twitter and Facebook

A guide to Slow Ways jargon

Waychecks? Waylists? Routes? Snails? Find out what these terms and a handful of others mean in our handy guide to Slow Ways jargon

If you’re new to Slow Ways you may be a little confused about some of the terms used on the website and in the community. Here is a handy guide to keep close when navigating the web of Waylists, Snails and Waychecks.

Slow Ways

Slow Ways is a project which aims to create a verified walking network between all of Britain’s towns and cities. These walking routes should ideally be accessible, as direct as possible and of course safe. “Slow Ways” usually refers to the project as a whole, the website and also the app.

Scrolling around the general Slow Ways network map, here we see Morecambe, Lancaster and other local places, connected by virtual Slow Way connections.

Place

A place refers to any town, city or other landmark which has appeared on the Slow Ways network map as a location to walk to or from. Places are the nodes of the network, and Slow Ways are the connectors.

Slow Way

A Slow Way is a virtual connection between two Places on the Slow Ways network. Each Slow Way may contain a number of Routes. The goal of Slow Ways is to make sure every Place is connected to another Place by a Slow Way. A Slow Way becomes verified once at least one Verified Route is in place. A Slow Way is named by the two places at either end, from West to East – eg. Hammersmith to Fulham becomes “Hamful” (even if you walked from Fulham to Hammersmith).

Route

A Route is a possible version of a walking route between two places to create a Slow Way connection. Routes are submitted as GPX files, points that correlate to a map which give a path for wayfinding apps such as OSMaps to follow.

Each Slow Way may have multiple routes which may be quite different to each other, or may be the same walk with slight differences. Each Route uploaded has a number attached: for example, Caerphilly and Cardiff are both Places on the network, and the routes Caecar one and Caecar two are the two possible Routes to make the Slow Way connection of Caecar. If someone discovers an alternate path, they can upload it as Caecar three for other volunteers to try walking (Read how to submit a route).

Even if a Route is declared unsuitable (eg for safety reasons), the route and number will remain listed alongside later routes as an example of what not to do.

The Slow Way, Morcar, features four route options. Morcar three has already had two positive reviews and, with a third, will become verified, making Morcar a verified Slow Way.

Volunteer / Review / Survey

Of course some people may like to just walk a Slow Ways route and that’s fine. For the network to thrive, however, we rely on volunteers who have registered an account and write Reviews when they’ve walked a Route.

Some volunteers can choose to go a step further and do our free survey training, which means they can submit a survey for the route as well, which looks at matters of safety and accessibility.

Pioneer / Snail / Verified

To pioneer a route is to be the first person to walk it and then write a review. To snail a route is to verify it; to be the third person to give it a positive review, whereupon it is marked with the snail logo. Once a route has three positive reviews, it usually becomes verified, although this does depend on what the negative reviews say (if there are any).

Waylist

Just like a Playlist of music, a Waylist is a share-able list of routes curated by a Slow Ways user, which they or someone else would like to walk. For example, we have a Waylist based on the Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, which takes the walker from Kingsbridge to Berwick-upon-Tweed. They don’t have to be through-hikes though: they can be a circle such as Darren’s Yorkshire Dales route, or thematically connected but geographically seperate, like Saira’s collection of sea walks.

Routing

Seperate from Waylists, Slow Ways also has a Routing feature. So for example, if you search for a route between Hayes and Hammersmith, you’ll be lucky enough to walk through four verified (snailed) Slow Ways routes that pass through Southall, Ealing Broadway, and Acton. There’s also an option to save the routed walk as a Waylist, which you can then tweak to your satisfaction (for example, if you want to hop on the Tube for part of that journey).

Swarm / Waycheck

In 2022, we held Swarm events where volunteers got together for meet-ups across the country to verify as many routes as possible over a weekend. This year, our every move is the new tradition as we start the Great Slow Ways Waycheck, which we hope will become as loved as the old tradition of beating the bounds. Waychecks will be opportunities for people to come together over a shared love of walking and ensure all their local routes are still as good as they were to walk the previous year (read more about Waychecks).

🐌

For more information on how to use Slow Ways, please refer to the How To page, or the YouTube playlist.

If you’re ready to pioneer, review and verify (or snail!) a route, create and share a waylist or even undergo survey training, sign up for Slow Ways here, and join our community on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

Building a home for grief in Edale

Writer and founder of Peaks of Colour, Evie Muir, shares how a recent “walkshop” in the Peak District created a safe passage for loss and liberation

On the morning of our first Peaks of Colour x Right to Roam walkshop, the sun shone down on our cheeks and I was relieved. Not because I’m ever one to be perturbed by the tumultuous Northern weather, but because I wanted to create as comfortable a space as possible for those who were trusting us with their pending discomfort.

This collaborative series of walkshops — creative and holistic workshops in nature — by and for people of colour, were curated by myself and Right to Roam organiser Nadia Shaikh, with the intention of exploring alternative routes to healing and justice. As people of colour, when our communities are segregated from the land, we are also segregated from healing — these spaces hope to resist and remedy that. 

Grief, that collective unifier, is often the emotion we’re forced to burden alone, yet it was grief that united us in Edale’s Village Hall that April morning. We sat round in a circle, sipping on cleaver tea freshly foraged by Nadia, mingling with faces familiar and new; but we didn’t sit down for long. After a brief introduction, we embarked on our journey and followed the road through the village, before turning down a footpath to our right. 

The road ahead

Leaving the tarmac behind, we become immersed under a leafy canopy, following cobbled steps down to a sturdy wooden bridge that supports us as we cross the Grinds Brook river. More steps support us as we climb out of this wooded valley, trees parting to expose the panoramic vista that is Grindslow Knoll, a tapestry of hills and plateaus. Amid my own asthmatic pants, audible gasps can be heard from the group as we pause to take in the immensity of the landscape we’re about to venture into. 

We pass through a meadow dotted with dandelions, letting the paved path guide us through another forested enclave and over another bridge, arched over a tumbling cascade of water. Here the path continues, leading other hikers on a steep scramble through Crowden Clough to the top of Kinder. Today however, we choose to ignore it.

Instead we turn down a dusty dirt path, wide enough only to put one foot in front of the other. It leads us to a grassy clearing nestled amongst the valleys of Edale, encased by the babbling brook that circles us. This is to be our workshop space. There, under the sweltering sun of an unpredictably glorious Saturday, we peel off ill-advised thermals, and come together as a community. 

Taking stock

Our first workshop was led by writer and founder of Feminist Invoicing, Monika Radojevic, whose gentle guidance supported us to reckon with the uncomfortable but necessary reminder that we can’t heal from what we avoid, suppress or minimise. As the river gurgled in the background she guided us to write invoices to white supremacy and the patriarchy, for all that disconnects us from ourselves, each other and the land. One person invoiced capitalism for their inability to rest, another for memories of a lost loved one whose happiness in old photographs they’d no longer be able to experience, another for the magic lost alongside millions of species now extinct. 

It was a creative and disruptive way of transforming a mundane tool of capitalism and bureaucracy, the invoice, as a template through which to quantify our traumas, process losses and better understand what we’re owed from a society that perpetually takes. 

Throughout the day clouds passed overhead, inquisitive sheep inspected our goings on and stoneflies danced around us. When recceing the walk the day before, Nadia and I had intended to add another leg to the journey, envisioning that the second workshop would take place in a different field that was home to skipping lambs. By lunch however, it was clear that our current location had become somewhat of a haven. The river made a gurgling border for our grief, enclosed it for safekeeping, and then, with Farzana’s gentle guidance, we set it free.

Letting go 

After lunch, Farzana Khan, founder of Healing Justice London led us in a grief circle that incorporated both discussion and embodied practices. After a grounding exercise that allowed us to feel centred in our bodies and held by the earth, we began to discuss the ways grief is both a weaponised tool of structural violence, and a powerful unifier. Farzana introduced us to the Five Gates of Grief as a lens in which to better understand our emotions, then taught us exercises that we could do as a communal or self-soothing practice, to help bring us back to a place of calm when the grief feels too much.

As the session drew to a close, she led us to the water. We formed two opposing lines on either side of the river and we let go of one of the bereavements that weighed heavy for us. I set free ‘avoidance’ as a survival strategy —  it kept me safe for many, many years, but I recognise now that it no longer serves me. Together, we watched as the river carried our innermost demons away.

In that little corner of the Peak District we made a home for ourselves that was so all-encompassing, it was easy to forget that a world full of financial woes, work stress, childcare, deadlines, and never ending chores even existed. The last leg of the journey allowed us to gently ease back into our respective realities. We gathered our bags, distributed the last of the snacks, ensured litter was collected and with a big stretch and a shake we returned along the same route we first started.

During lunch Nadia and I had distributed small metal tins, one per person — an idea inspired by Peaks of Colour Volunteer, Dalbinder Kular’s nature writing walkshops. We guided the group to collect items from the land; a stone, a feather, a flower, a leaf — whatever caught our eyes or offered meaning to us on our walk back. In a context where our connection with land, as people of colour, is severed, these tins could serve as a reminder of time spent in nature. 

I learnt that day along the hiking trails of Edale, that grief weighs lighter when held in community, and lighter still when that community is held in nature

As we followed the familiar route back I was struck with how varied the losses were that came up for people in this space. While many of us processed the more tangible losses of loved ones, one person grieved the self that was lost when they had a child, another the dualities of past, present and future selves that arise when transitioning.

For me, I grieved the person who I could have been had it not been for abusive partners stealing the opportunity to be defined by anything other than a survivor, or a victim. These personal experiences of grief were held as a communal experience. I learnt that day along the hiking trails of Edale, that grief weighs lighter when held in community, and lighter still when that community is held in nature. 

Evie Muir

I’m Evie (she/they), I’m both a domestic abuse survivor and qualified domestic abuse specialist, writer and the founder of Peaks of Colour — a Peak District based nature-for-healing community group, by and for people of colour. 

Having worked in the VAWG sector for over 10 years’, specialising in Black and queer survivors’ intersectional experiences of gendered and racialised trauma, I left the sector when I became burnt out, disenfranchised and disillusioned. My work now sits on the intersections of gendered, racial and land justice, and seeks to nurture survivors’ joy, rest, hope and imagination as abolitionist praxis. Advocating for the decolonisation of the outdoors, I’m interested in the ways nature can forge a landscape of healing and justice outside of carceral feminist models. 

As a Northern freelance writer I’m passionate about the liberating form of writing as healing and resistance. My debut book, ‘Radical Rest’, explores Black and Abolitionist Feminist approaches to activist burnout and will be published by Elliot & Thompson in 2024.

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Behind the scenes of our new video: What is Slow Ways?

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Slow Ways’ new promotional video asks viewers to #GiveaHike.

In the video, titled What is Slow Ways, walkers and wheelers from around the UK are seen making journeys to help verify the Slow Ways network around the UK. The video features feet-first walking clips sent in from across the community, including one that looks rather wet. We also sent filmmaker Jason Brooks to film smiling faces walking through Bristol on Winbri two, and we sent Mark Davenport to film wheelchair users from the Experience Community wheeling along Marsla one. You can watch it for yourself below, and we’ve also got Slow Ways’ Lara to tell us more about the Bristol shooting day.

Experience Community were very involved in the very early days of Slow Ways, advising on the grading system that we have in place.
The canalside route of Marsla one has rough bits and slopes, but the group knew it to be accessible to them and their Mountain Trike wheelchairs. This is a perfect illustration of how important it can be to have prior knowledge of a route; not just for this group, but for people with all sorts of access needs. Thanks to people all over the country reviewing and surveying Slow Ways, you can find out what routes will likely work for large dogs, muddy days, pushchairs etc.

Lara Kramer
Slow Ways Partnerships Lead

After booking the filming day for early March, I just had to cross my fingers for good weather. I travelled up to Bristol from Cornwall the night before in the torrential rain: the forecast was not good. I imagined myself chasing a six-foot-seven filmmaker with a flimsy waterproof and tarpaulin.

In the morning, I traipsed around Bristol city centre shopping centre in Supermarket Sweep style. Armfuls of all of the umbrellas in sight amused the checkout staff at T.K.Maxx, while the hunt for lanyards had me begging phone shop staff to rifle through under the counter.

We had chosen to walk a part of Winbri two, which my colleague and I had walked just a few weeks earlier. We had really enjoyed the walk and commented on what a great route it was for taking in different landscapes, from grimy flyovers to a countryside estate. The walk briskly picks up pace approaching Harbourside so it seemed fitting to use it as a good example of a Slow Way, and it also happened to be a pretty accessible and flat route too which assured suitability for the wheeler in the group.

We were expecting 12 extras to come along and join us for the filming day but with a series of drop outs in the 24 hours before, and one young man who just forgot, we were down to seven. A stroke of luck: the rain had stopped and it looked like following the film maker with a waterproof wasn’t going to be needed!

We set out along the harbourside, making easy conversation as we went whilst Jason ran circles around us with his gimbal camera. The group consisted of extras, facilitators, a newbie to Bristol, a recent film graduate and a University researcher, but everyone had the joy of walking and being in the outdoors as a common thread.

As we walked and talked our way to the Cumberland Basin, we forgot about being filmed and eased into our new walking group status, frequently swapping lead walkers and shapeshifting to suit the landscapes and the requests that we were getting from our Director. This made for a fun time getting to know each other, which was a good reminder of how walking in a group of relative strangers can be such a delightful, levelling and enjoyable experience.

A quick stop for coffee and cake at Ashton Court gave us all the chance to refuel before turning around and walking back to our original destination. On the return journey, the sun shone and it was as if we floated back to base camp. Aside from a moment where Jason got stuck on the wrong side of a fence with his camera, the whole filming day went without a blip and everyone involved enjoyed the day immensely.

The group are considering doing something similar again, and with Bristol so close to being verified, it would be great to organise. We wish to thank everyone who was involved in making the Slow Ways promotional video: namely Jason, who did a fantastic job filming, editing and animating the film. We are delighted with the result.

Ready to #GiveAHike yourself? Sign up today. You can also download the iOS App.

Walking with Harold Fry


Saira immerses herself in the The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, walking with the author Rachel Joyce and finding out about the joys and challenges of community

A few weeks before the The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry was released in cinemas across the UK, I joined Emily Rhodes and Rachel Joyce on Emily’s Walking Book Club in Hampstead Heath.

Emily’s Walking Book Club

Following a quick introduction, we set off on the walk. As we wandered, we were encouraged to speak to different people. Every so often, we stopped at a designated point and were given a new discussion prompt by Emily; some related to Harold, some didn’t.

Rachel shared her ideas, insights and reflections on the story. The walk was well attended, mostly by women of different ages: ardent readers and writers, and some walkers.

During the afternoon I connected with various individuals – an older woman who’d grown up in North London spoke of walking miles to the Hampstead Fair when she was a little girl. A young petite Asian woman new to London who said she spends most weekends wandering around trying to get to know the place she now calls home. A free-spirited Australian woman who works in advertising but seeks something more creative.

My most memorable encounter was with a former New Yorker named Maggie, a warm, charismatic, visually impaired Jewish writer. She was full of stories. We talked rats and ramblings, the neighbourhoods that make up cities (London and New York) – and of course, we talked about Harold’s journey.

Embarrassingly, I hadn’t yet read the book, but I knew the story. It became richer and more complex the more Rachel spoke of her experiences and connection to the characters. I made a mental note of the things she shared that struck me: deciding to take the train to Berwick-upon-Tweed to witness the filming of the final scene and then coming to realise that she was really there to say goodbye to her dad who had died in recent years, as well as the magic that comes from watching people and being moved by them.

Following on from the book club and a wandering intermission of sorts, we filed into the Everyman Cinema to watch a private screening of the film.

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry

It was deeply sad yet hopeful – the film chronicled Harold’s journey walking 450 miles from Devon to Berwick-on-Tweed to save his friend Queenie. Harold, an ordinary man, was undertaking an extraordinary pilgrimage.

It reminded me of inspiring individuals in the Slow Ways community who had embarked on extraordinary journeys for a purpose; people like Annie, a nurse who walked from Ipswich to Bristol for her premature grandson River, Lizzie who carried her baby 50 miles to her mother’s house partly as protest march against the sanctity of motherhood, and Steve and Sandra, who walked from their home in Bucks to their former homes in the West Midlands using Slow Ways, to raise money for the ultra-rare xeroderma pigmentosum.

Harold walked for a purpose and took the most direct route, on the way he encountered various people and places – he experienced the joy of community, and its challenges too.

An interview with Rachel Joyce

A few days after watching the film, I interviewed Rachel Joyce. We spoke about Harold’s journey, walking, community and more.

Tell us about Harold?

Throughout, he’s true to the man he is, an ordinary man. Harold isn’t a walker. I wanted to show this through the shoes he wore. He travels light, he undertakes a journey, direct and unplanned, between two places and for a purpose. For his friend Queenie. He travels through urban areas, along motorways and in the suburbs, as well as through the countryside.

His journey takes in the landscapes and cityscapes that you would encounter were you to undertake a similar journey. The fact that he is travelling light, that’s he’s a pilgrim traversing transitory spaces in which nobody belongs, opens him up to passers-by. People can share their stories and secrets with him.

Click here for our Harold Fry themed Waylist, for walking a similar route to that seen in the film.

I loved that the film draws light upon the way we inspire, or touch people’s lives, be it knowingly or unknowingly. Meeting the people he met was integral to Harold’s healing journey. We might not be able to save people but we can provide comfort through our words, through our acceptance of them. How important was community to Harold’s journey?

I’m a big believer of community. It’s so important to honour community. It’s sad to see so many churches, community centres and libraries closing down. It’s wrong. I’d notice (in my library), that often people weren’t coming in for books. They were lost and wanted a place to linger. The library, and other meanwhile spaces, offer that. Our experiences of covid showed just how important community spaces are. By taking these places away, people don’t encounter one another. We put up more boundaries, we don’t understand one another and this is dangerous, it’s counter to who we are.

I couldn’t agree more. This comes across beautifully on Harold’s journey, the idea that people want and need to connect, to be seen and heard. That people want to be part of a community. And my last question: if you could walk between any two places in the UK what would those places be and why?

I think I’d walk between Tewksbury and Shrewsbury. I’m interested in places with a spiritual connection, places that are rich in possibilities and mystery. I’m also interested in urban places where the streets are invested with more meaning and greater connections. I like churches… I like the idea of walking to get lost and not knowing where you were going…  

Thank you so much Rachel!

You can buy The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry book here (Amazon / Hive / Bookshop). Harold Fry is now out in cinemas across the UK. We highly recommend watching!