Walking Home

reveries of an amateur long-distance hiker

Walking to Cape Wrath, Day 22, June 1, 2022

June 2nd, 2022

Walking to Cape Wrath, Day 22, June 1, 2022


A short distance from where I was yesterday lies Rannoch, or as the poet once designated it, “Rannoch, by Glencoe.” I try to imagine T.S. Eliot walking these hills. An American from St. Louis, desperate to be an Englishman, travels to Scotland, and surprisingly, in the first stanza evokes something of the mood that accompanies a long day’s walk on the moors:

Here the crow starves, here the patient stag

Breeds for the rifle. Between the soft moor

And the soft sky, scarcely room

To leap or soar. Substance crumbles, in the thin air

In a few lines he captures ecological, almost geological, history. The great Caledonian Forest (tonight I am sleeping next to a faint remnant of that wood—dead giant trees standing silver on the hillside) was decimated by many factors, not the least was the transformation of this land into hunting preserves— a sordid history, but here to this day, the “patient stag/ Breeds for the rifle.” I passed many on my descent into Glen Loyne.

But what Eliot does even better is capture the sublimity of these moors. Of course the sublime is an aesthetic category, one all too often invoked by nature writers, but here I’m generalizing (perhaps unfairly) the phenomenon in chemistry. Sublimation describes the change of state of matter directly from solid to gas. To me, it also describes any of those phase changes crossings— the moment of state change. The moors are sublime because they waver, almost tremble, between states. Is that spot where you are about to step solid or liquid? It usually turns out to be a little of both. Eliot’s repetition of the word “soft” here is key— softness is either tactile and can only be known by direct touching, or it is visual, indicating a lack of sharpness, clarity, focus. On these moors, “Substance crumbles, in the thin air.”  Tonight I sleep in my tent by the Loyne River, in an isolated, almost magical glen that bears no marks— all is a green softness.

T. Hugh Crawford

Walking to Cape Wrath, Day 21, May 31, 2022

May 31st, 2022

Walking to Cape Wrath, Day 21, May 31, 2022

Equipment day—the other day I broke a trekking pole—pair of graphite Leki’s that have been around the world. I’d been concerned about them all trip, and now that I’ll be in the wilds, it seemed prudent to replace. After breakfast at the hostel, I stopped for coffee by the canal, then caught a bus to Fort William, the largest town in the region and home to several equipment shops, including Cotswolds which, though at times pricy, always has quality equipment. Got new, high-end Leki’s, a warmer hat, and laid in some super power bars to have as backup food supply in the event I get caught out in the wilds longer than anticipated.

Fort William is charming, a man playing music in the square, and lots of dayhikers as Ben Nevis looms over the town. This is also the home of the Jacobin Express, the steam train featured in the Harry Potter movies. All in all, a low key day, welcome after the rigors of the last couple.

T. Hugh Crawford