The Two Moors Way
The Two Moors Way
4.6
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4.6
14 รีวิว
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Manie M.
Schwarzenbek, เยอรมนี29 ผลงาน
ส.ค. ค.ศ. 2020
Wir sind zu 2 den Coast to Coast Path/ Two Moors Way in 10 Tagen gewandert.
Leider sind wir mit sehr schlechtem Wetter gestartet und wurden mitten im Dartmoor von Sturm Francis überrascht und hätten ohne GPS den Weg nicht mehr gefunden, denn er war absolut nicht mehr zu sehen.
Davon abgesehen, dass wir auch am zweiten Tag mehr als nass wurden und die Tagesstrecke auf der Hälfte bei Grimpspound abbrechen mussten, war es dennoch ein herausragendes Erlebnis.
Man sollte sich unbedingt einstellen auf permanentes auf und ab (mal mehr, mal weniger steil), tiefere Matschstellen, über die man nicht einfach rüber kommt (auch nach ein paar Tagen ohne Regen), und dass es als nicht geübter Wanderer eine wirkliche Anstrengung bedeutet.
Unbedingt dabei haben sollte man: wasserundurchlässige Schuhe und Regenkleidung, Blasenpflaster, genug Wasser zu trinken und etwas Verpflegung (wir hatten Keckse und Nüsse). Außerdem eine gute Karte, Kompass oder GPS Route auf dem Handy. Und einen Rucksack mit Regenüberzug.
Dennoch wurden wir bei anschließend schönem Wetter mit wundervollen Aussichten belohnt, haben jede Menge Schafe, Rinder, Dart-/Exmoor-Ponys und Hühner gesehen und wenige Menschen. Die Moorlandschaft (bei uns blühte gerade Heide und Ginster) ist bei schönem Wetter ein absoluter Traum.
Leider sind wir mit sehr schlechtem Wetter gestartet und wurden mitten im Dartmoor von Sturm Francis überrascht und hätten ohne GPS den Weg nicht mehr gefunden, denn er war absolut nicht mehr zu sehen.
Davon abgesehen, dass wir auch am zweiten Tag mehr als nass wurden und die Tagesstrecke auf der Hälfte bei Grimpspound abbrechen mussten, war es dennoch ein herausragendes Erlebnis.
Man sollte sich unbedingt einstellen auf permanentes auf und ab (mal mehr, mal weniger steil), tiefere Matschstellen, über die man nicht einfach rüber kommt (auch nach ein paar Tagen ohne Regen), und dass es als nicht geübter Wanderer eine wirkliche Anstrengung bedeutet.
Unbedingt dabei haben sollte man: wasserundurchlässige Schuhe und Regenkleidung, Blasenpflaster, genug Wasser zu trinken und etwas Verpflegung (wir hatten Keckse und Nüsse). Außerdem eine gute Karte, Kompass oder GPS Route auf dem Handy. Und einen Rucksack mit Regenüberzug.
Dennoch wurden wir bei anschließend schönem Wetter mit wundervollen Aussichten belohnt, haben jede Menge Schafe, Rinder, Dart-/Exmoor-Ponys und Hühner gesehen und wenige Menschen. Die Moorlandschaft (bei uns blühte gerade Heide und Ginster) ist bei schönem Wetter ein absoluter Traum.
เขียนเมื่อ 6 กันยายน ค.ศ. 2020
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elmcityjohn
New Haven, CT121 ผลงาน
มิ.ย. ค.ศ. 2019 • เดินทางคนเดียว
I did nine days starting in Wembury. For the last day instead of the official route I went from Withypool to Dunster via Dunkery Beacon. That put me in a good spot to get a bus to a rail station in then on to Paddington in London.
I did some real preparation for navigating the trip and as a result I had no problems. I had downloaded each days tracks onto my GPS using the AllTrails app. The Cicerrone guide book is very helpful. You really need it to find your way through the farms and fields of central Devon. I averaged about 13 miles per day.
I arranged the trip through Encounter Walking Holidays, which specializes in south west England. They arranged my accommodations and luggage transfer. They also provide the guide book and map. They provide great personalized service.
One nice feature of this route is the varied terrain. The farms of central Devon are quite different from the high moors of Dartmoor. I enjoyed the route very much.
I'd suggest reading Lorna Doone and the House of the Baskerville to get you into the spirit of the route (recommended to me by Encounter Walking).
I did some real preparation for navigating the trip and as a result I had no problems. I had downloaded each days tracks onto my GPS using the AllTrails app. The Cicerrone guide book is very helpful. You really need it to find your way through the farms and fields of central Devon. I averaged about 13 miles per day.
I arranged the trip through Encounter Walking Holidays, which specializes in south west England. They arranged my accommodations and luggage transfer. They also provide the guide book and map. They provide great personalized service.
One nice feature of this route is the varied terrain. The farms of central Devon are quite different from the high moors of Dartmoor. I enjoyed the route very much.
I'd suggest reading Lorna Doone and the House of the Baskerville to get you into the spirit of the route (recommended to me by Encounter Walking).
เขียนเมื่อ 27 กรกฎาคม ค.ศ. 2019
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Heinrich Duepmann
Guetersloh343 ผลงาน
ต.ค. ค.ศ. 2018 • เดินทางคนเดียว
Moor oder Heidelandschaft passt besser. Frühmorgens, wo tw. noch die Nebelbänke hinden und die Sonne schon durchkam war es noch gespenstisch. An der Clapper-Bridge hatte ich dann schon tolle Sonne und ich bin etwas den Bach lang gelaufen, habe einem Maler zugeschaut und die toughen Moorwanderer mit Ihren Maps bewundert. Das klare Wasser, das Zwitschern der Vögel, das Wasserrauschen, das Klettern über die Felsen lohnt wirklich. Festes wasserfestes Schuhwerk und Rucksack statt Tasche sind ein Muss.
เขียนเมื่อ 22 พฤศจิกายน ค.ศ. 2018
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alantrevarton
Poole, UK6 ผลงาน
มิ.ย. ค.ศ. 2018 • เดินทางคนเดียว
I did this in June, 130 miles, starting at Plymouth, to Wembury and on to Lynmouth in a week. I had fairly good weather and was wild camping and backpacking. Its quite difficult to plan accommodation and there are only one or two campsites, hence the wild camping. The walk itself has some lovely highpoints, Dartmoor and Exmoor and a few bits in between. Dartmoor is not signposted due to its wild nature, Exmoor is signposted, yet still feels wild and unspoilt, the middle section is signposted but in some places not at all well, so follow the map and guide book. Apart from the few community cafes and some pubs, many of the refreshment stops were closed apart from lunch and dinnertime, so be prepared for this. Some places which should have stops (eg Withypool and Simonsbath) I found nothing open (except one shop in Withypool but even the public toilets were closed), so be prepared for poor facilities. This may be Devon but the Lakes and Scotland feel friendlier for walkers.
เขียนเมื่อ 21 มิถุนายน ค.ศ. 2018
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mickeyj81
somerset11 ผลงาน
มิ.ย. ค.ศ. 2018 • เดินทางคนเดียว
I walked this route in early may, and had great weather all the way. I did it in 5 days, which was quite a challenge, as I was wild camping, and carrying all my own gear. I would definitely recommend it. Some of the views of the moor, and the coast are really impressive, and the moor sections feel very remote in places.
In my opinion, basic map reading skills are adequate, as other than a couple of moor sections, the route is very well sign posted. I used the Harvey 2 moors way map, which I found was perfect, but I also took a Dartmoor os map, and a gps, because the weather can be notoriously bad on Dartmoor.
only met 2 other people doing the route, which surprised me, as it’s a great walk.
I highly recommend it, and I’ll certainly be doing it again at some point.
In my opinion, basic map reading skills are adequate, as other than a couple of moor sections, the route is very well sign posted. I used the Harvey 2 moors way map, which I found was perfect, but I also took a Dartmoor os map, and a gps, because the weather can be notoriously bad on Dartmoor.
only met 2 other people doing the route, which surprised me, as it’s a great walk.
I highly recommend it, and I’ll certainly be doing it again at some point.
เขียนเมื่อ 3 มิถุนายน ค.ศ. 2018
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Madalyn H
Huddersfield, UK1,844 ผลงาน
พ.ค. ค.ศ. 2018 • คู่รัก
We did the full walk over a continuous 6 day period and enjoyed the great variety. Both moor sections are not well signposted and reasonable navigation skills are required, particularly in poor weather. We travelled in May and it was quite wet and muddy underfoot. The middle section particularly had fantastic wild flowers, including numerous orchids. We used Encounter Holidays for our booking and baggage transfers which worked very well.
เขียนเมื่อ 10 พฤษภาคม ค.ศ. 2018
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Highway272
ไบรตัน, UK33 ผลงาน
ก.พ. ค.ศ. 2018 • ครอบครัว
We did 2 days walking from Chagford to Ivybridge with a stop at Scoriton. Tough stuff, some extreme weather but fabulous and varied landscapes. Full of interest: Devon Hedgerows, mining archeology, grand vistas, vast seaviews, river valleys. View of Dart river is the highlight. Signposting is poor - good navigation and mapreading skills essential.
เขียนเมื่อ 13 กุมภาพันธ์ ค.ศ. 2018
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Bekka W
1 ผลงาน
ส.ค. ค.ศ. 2017 • เพื่อนๆ
Completed this section today. 23.4km in 5hrs 23mins. Very muddy and slippery underfoot. Good signage however we also used the Cicerone Two Moors Way guidebook, very helpful however some of the stiles have been replaced with gates and vice versa. There are at leat two directional typo errors in the book and at one point towards Ivybridge the OS map I had been tracking our route on my phone with of the Two Moors Way, routes you in a different direction from both the route given in the book and the signage put up by Devon Council of the Erme Plym Trail. Either route takes you in the same direction.
Some lovely scenery, particularly of Dartmoor that looms closer as you progress through your day, lots of cows, young bulls and sheep. However considering it is the height of summer we did not see a single soul and the route in places looked like it hadn't been travelled much at all. Even on this route a compass would be an advantage though you can do without.
Some lovely scenery, particularly of Dartmoor that looms closer as you progress through your day, lots of cows, young bulls and sheep. However considering it is the height of summer we did not see a single soul and the route in places looked like it hadn't been travelled much at all. Even on this route a compass would be an advantage though you can do without.
เขียนเมื่อ 18 สิงหาคม ค.ศ. 2017
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brett s
ออตตาวา, แคนาดา22 ผลงาน
พ.ค. ค.ศ. 2017 • คู่รัก
My wife and I just completed this wonderful long distance trail for the second time. We took nine days to do it in 2010, and this year completed it in eight days. I think you would have to be in training for the Ironman competition to do it in less than eight days. The hike, starting in Ivybridge, crosses Dartmoor National Park for about three days. It takes another three days to cross through central Devon and two days to complete the Exmoor National park portion to end up in Lynmouth on the Bristol channel.
We noticed there are very few reviews for this trail so we thought, having done it twice, we would pass on the following tips and observations.
You should do the hike as a whole, at once over eight days or in stages . We don't agree that you should cut out the agricultural part because then why start out on a long distance hike? You would miss the incredible feeling of success that comes with completing a long continuous 100 mile plus walk by cutting out the middle. Both Moors are exceptional on their own right but to see how people live and work on the farms and sleepy interior villages in between is also part of the overall satisfaction. One day you are on rugged moorland watching a herd of Red Deer, another day you are walking into a three hundred year old church, unattended and left open for all to see, or sitting down with a landlady of a local pub who is fascinated that someone would drop in on foot from so far away to have lunch at her pub.
We hiked the Two Moors Way in late June 2010 and had consistently sunny, hot (27 Celsius) temperatures and only 15 minutes of rain. We hiked it in 2017 in early May and had two gales, some hot days and great cool hiking (15 Celsius) weather for the most part.
In contrast to some more popular British trails, expect to see next to no other hikers. This year in eight days we counted, in total, six oncoming Two Moors Way hikers, and were passed by one group of six walkers heading the other way. We did the first stretch of 21 kilometres across the wildest part of Dartmoor and saw no one else.
This is a serious hike. Some training in hilly terrain beforehand is essential. Ordnance Survey maps, the 1:25,000 scale are a must. We tried saving money on a 1:50,000 map on the first try in 2010 and got lost. We are Canadian and the featureless terrain and lack of trees and lakes make identifying one Tor from another hard, so the more detail on your map the better.
There are parts of the trail with no waymarks and no visible path, but good map reading and compass work will keep you out of trouble as you quickly get to areas where you can verify your position with landmarks be it roads, farms, stone crosses and watercourses. Beware of mists, we never encountered a serious one, but there are alternative routes you can take to stay off of some of the worst sections of rugged upland Moor in poor weather.
A few of the great pubs we stayed in in 2010 have sadly closed such as the Church House Inn in Holne but there are some top rate farms and B and Bs to consider in the areas. We had to divert off the route to find accommodations three times this year. It seems hard to find accommodation options near Widecombe in the Moor, so we went on to Haytor Vale. The walk there was excellent, but you need to get a lift or taxi back to Widecombe the next morning in order to avoid a long plus 30 kilometre slog. Luckily for us there is Moorland Taxis, whose driver, Sally picked us up and kept us entertained on stories about the moors as she drove us to our starting off point near Hamel Down Ridge. Be prepared to walk the distance back to the trail if you go off route for accommodation, though. As we found as we moved north that just calling a local taxi for a short jog back to the trail was impossible.
The highlights of this trail for us are the beautiful varied terrain you pass through, the pastoral green hills, the bluebell woods, yellow gorse, ridges with views that go on forever and the abundance of farm animals and wildlife. We saw in excess of 200 wild Red Deer walking up a distant valley on the last day as we climbed up from Simonsbath towards Lynmouth, which remains for us an unforgettable sight, and we have hiked extensively in Britain.
The last thing a trip on the Two Moors Way gave us was a wonderful appreciation for draught Cider, the perfect invention to celebrate at the end of your long tiring day.
If you get to Lynmouth and still feel you have more energy to expend, we would highly recommend adding on another three day section of the South West Coast Path, between Porlock and Combe Martin. The sea and clifftop views were absolutely magnificent, but be forewarned there are some monster hills to climb, dwarfing anything on the Two Moors Way.
We noticed there are very few reviews for this trail so we thought, having done it twice, we would pass on the following tips and observations.
You should do the hike as a whole, at once over eight days or in stages . We don't agree that you should cut out the agricultural part because then why start out on a long distance hike? You would miss the incredible feeling of success that comes with completing a long continuous 100 mile plus walk by cutting out the middle. Both Moors are exceptional on their own right but to see how people live and work on the farms and sleepy interior villages in between is also part of the overall satisfaction. One day you are on rugged moorland watching a herd of Red Deer, another day you are walking into a three hundred year old church, unattended and left open for all to see, or sitting down with a landlady of a local pub who is fascinated that someone would drop in on foot from so far away to have lunch at her pub.
We hiked the Two Moors Way in late June 2010 and had consistently sunny, hot (27 Celsius) temperatures and only 15 minutes of rain. We hiked it in 2017 in early May and had two gales, some hot days and great cool hiking (15 Celsius) weather for the most part.
In contrast to some more popular British trails, expect to see next to no other hikers. This year in eight days we counted, in total, six oncoming Two Moors Way hikers, and were passed by one group of six walkers heading the other way. We did the first stretch of 21 kilometres across the wildest part of Dartmoor and saw no one else.
This is a serious hike. Some training in hilly terrain beforehand is essential. Ordnance Survey maps, the 1:25,000 scale are a must. We tried saving money on a 1:50,000 map on the first try in 2010 and got lost. We are Canadian and the featureless terrain and lack of trees and lakes make identifying one Tor from another hard, so the more detail on your map the better.
There are parts of the trail with no waymarks and no visible path, but good map reading and compass work will keep you out of trouble as you quickly get to areas where you can verify your position with landmarks be it roads, farms, stone crosses and watercourses. Beware of mists, we never encountered a serious one, but there are alternative routes you can take to stay off of some of the worst sections of rugged upland Moor in poor weather.
A few of the great pubs we stayed in in 2010 have sadly closed such as the Church House Inn in Holne but there are some top rate farms and B and Bs to consider in the areas. We had to divert off the route to find accommodations three times this year. It seems hard to find accommodation options near Widecombe in the Moor, so we went on to Haytor Vale. The walk there was excellent, but you need to get a lift or taxi back to Widecombe the next morning in order to avoid a long plus 30 kilometre slog. Luckily for us there is Moorland Taxis, whose driver, Sally picked us up and kept us entertained on stories about the moors as she drove us to our starting off point near Hamel Down Ridge. Be prepared to walk the distance back to the trail if you go off route for accommodation, though. As we found as we moved north that just calling a local taxi for a short jog back to the trail was impossible.
The highlights of this trail for us are the beautiful varied terrain you pass through, the pastoral green hills, the bluebell woods, yellow gorse, ridges with views that go on forever and the abundance of farm animals and wildlife. We saw in excess of 200 wild Red Deer walking up a distant valley on the last day as we climbed up from Simonsbath towards Lynmouth, which remains for us an unforgettable sight, and we have hiked extensively in Britain.
The last thing a trip on the Two Moors Way gave us was a wonderful appreciation for draught Cider, the perfect invention to celebrate at the end of your long tiring day.
If you get to Lynmouth and still feel you have more energy to expend, we would highly recommend adding on another three day section of the South West Coast Path, between Porlock and Combe Martin. The sea and clifftop views were absolutely magnificent, but be forewarned there are some monster hills to climb, dwarfing anything on the Two Moors Way.
เขียนเมื่อ 10 กรกฎาคม ค.ศ. 2017
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Carolyn M
ลอสแอนเจลิส, แคลิฟอร์เนีย52 ผลงาน
พ.ค. ค.ศ. 2017
There's not much I can add to the comprehensive reviews on this site, except for the following, I believe, important information. We did this walk in late May, and were warned that there will be rain and mist possibly obscuring the path. Better advice would have been that even without rain and mist, there will be miles upon miles where there IS NO PATH! If in addition you have the rain and mist, then be prepared to be totally discombobulated unless you are very savvy with your map and compass. We were a couple with 3 phones between the 2 of us and all 3 of our phones died (for good) on the second day of the walk, due to the heavy mist, rain and general humidity. With that we lost our GPS and were truly entirely dependent on our map and compass. As well, be prepared to walk through a great deal of poo (no other way to say it)....I mean heaps and heaps of it and ankle deep.
On the plus side, you will be awed by the stunning landscapes and the ever changing views and vistas. You will enjoy this beautiful walk, if you come prepared
On the plus side, you will be awed by the stunning landscapes and the ever changing views and vistas. You will enjoy this beautiful walk, if you come prepared
เขียนเมื่อ 27 พฤษภาคม ค.ศ. 2017
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I have just completed the walk, the advice is to take a compass and Harvey’s walk specific map. I preferred to take the Cicerone guide book,which is a must because of the detailed guidance it contains, and the route mapped onto an OS app (I also carried a power pack in case the iPhone ran out of battery). If you walked in winter you would need a compass.
เขียนเมื่อ 5 กรกฎาคม 2018
So, Bucksvoyager, I have trail running shoes. Would you say they would not be appropriate and boots are a must? Coming from Florida at the end of August.
เขียนเมื่อ 27 กรกฎาคม 2016
High quality boots needed. Gaiters also useful to stop water getting in over the top if your foot goes into a mire.
เขียนเมื่อ 21 มีนาคม 2018
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