The Great Outdoors – July 2019

(Ben Green) #1
Cribyn & N escarpment
from Pen y Fan

90 The Great Outdoors July 2019


lead the eye onwards to the tall
cone that’s The Curr.
The Curr is grassy. And the
grass is grasping, calf-deep and
clingy. So I go up quite slowly,
stopping rather often to enjoy
the growing view. And then
The Curr turns to that tufty
sedge stuff that’s even harder
to go up than the clingy
grassland was. For a hill
that’s only 564m high, The
Curr does have an awful lot
of sedgy slope to go up.
The summit, when it comes,
is quite different. No more
unpleasant sedge. Instead,
a whole heap of unpleasant
heather, knee-deep and peaty.
It’s also rather flat, with not
much to look at apart from
some more knee-deep heather.
So no, The Curr doesn’t


cut it. Fortunately, the Curr-
swerving bypass isn’t hard to
find. And it’s a goodie. The
older version of the Pennine
Way rises out of Halterburn by
an old green trackway carved
into the steep side of Black
Hill. So I go down the green
track to just before The Curr,
and then come back up it –
and continue to an altogether
superior hill, The Schil. The
Schil has short grass, and the
Pennine Way path, and a rocky
little tor. The Schil has grand
views backwards across the
valley, and even grander views
forward to The Cheviot.
From the Schil it’s downhill
almost all the way. The higher
Pennine Way line runs almost
effortlessly down the 4km
Steer Ridge, with a stiff but

short ascent over White Law.
The Stob Stones are where the
Gypsy King and Queen were
crowned in the days when
travelling folk and tinkers
ruled over this tricky bit of
Border hillside. But even after
lingering at the Stob Stones,
I’m still at the Yetholm Hostel
an hour before it opens.
There are hills like The
Curr you go up once and you
won’t be going back. But there
are other hills you go up once
and you want to go again, as
soon as possible. Staerough,
say: wouldn’t it make a sweet
little circuit, starting off along
the banks of Bowmont Water?
So I dump my sack on the
hostel steps, and go back up
Staerough Hill to catch the
early evening light.

Further information
Maps: OS 1:25,000
Explorer sheet OL16
(The Cheviot Hills); Harvey
1:40,000 Superwalker,
Cheviot Hills

Transport: Kirk Yetholm
(1.5km from start) has
Peter Hogg bus 81 to Kelso, with
links to Berwick and Edinburgh
(regular buses Monday to
Friday, more limited on
Saturdays, no Sunday service).
See roadhoggs.net

i


Information: Kelso TIC
01573 228055, also see
stcuthbertsway.info

[Captions clockwise from top]
Lower Pennine Way above Old
Halterburn; Stob Stones; Halter
Burn, with The Curr
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