Cycling Land's End to John o' Groats: LEJOG end-to-end on quiet roads and traffic-free paths
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About this ebook
A guidebook to cycling LEJOG – Land’s End to John o’ Groats. Covering 1600km (1000 miles), this route along the length of Britain takes 2 weeks to complete and is suitable for cyclists with a reasonable level of fitness.
The route is described from south to north in 14 stages, each between 60 and 92km (96–147 miles) in length. An abbreviated route description is given for those cycling the route north to south (JOGLE). An alternative route through Central Scotland is also described.
- 1:200,000 maps and profiles included for each stage
- GPX files for both LEJOG and JOGLE routes available for download
- Alternative route schedules between 10 and 18 days are provided
- Refreshment and accommodation information given for each stage
- Advice on planning and preparation
Richard Barrett
Richard Barrett spent his working life as a professional marketer, but still found time for climbing, winter mountaineering and sea kayaking. He first visited the Harris hills as a teenager and became a regular visitor. He lived in North Harris for a number of years, where he and his wife ran a guest house and, although now a city-dweller, he still makes frequent forays to the Hebrides, reconnecting with the wilderness and catching up with old friends.
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Cycling Land's End to John o' Groats - Richard Barrett
About the Author
After years of road running and mountaineering wreaked havoc with his knees, Richard Barrett returned to long-distance cycling in his fifties when he bought himself a classic British made touring bike. Now in his sixties, he rides a hand-made bike from one of the great British frame makers that have appeared in recent years. Combined with walking, cycling allows him to continue his love affair with the more mountainous parts of the UK which he first visited as a teenager.
His spent his career in marketing in multinational organisations in the UK and abroad, but he now lives in West Cheshire and, if he is not touring, rides two or three times a week with local Cycling UK groups.
Other Cicerone guides by the author
Cycle touring in Wales
Cycling in the Hebrides
Cycling in the Lake District
Cycling Lon Las Cymru
The Hebridean Way
Walking on Harris and Lewis
CYCLING LAND’S END TO JOHN O’ GROATS
LEJOG END-TO-END ON QUIET ROADS AND TRAFFIC-FREE PATHS
by Richard Barrett
JUNIPER HOUSE, MURLEY MOSS,
OXENHOLME ROAD, KENDAL, CUMBRIA LA9 7RL
www.cicerone.co.uk
© Richard Barrett 2021
Third edition 2021 Reprinted 2022 (with updates)
ISBN 9781783628506
Second edition 2019
ISBN 9781852848583
Printed in Singapore by KHL using responsibly sourced paper
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
All photographs are by the author unless otherwise stated.
Route mapping by Lovell Johns www.lovelljohns.com
© Crown copyright 2021 OS PU100012932. NASA relief data courtesy of ESRI
Dedication
This book is dedicated to my club-mate Mari, who mid-way through writing this guidebook also became my partner.
Acknowledgements
My thanks to Jonathan and Joe Williams of Cicerone for commissioning me to produce this book and introducing me to wonderful bits of country I had never previously visited. I should also like to thank Andrea, Verity and the production team, who once again made the process such a pleasure and my friend Ian Gilbert who joined me through the Scottish Lowlands.
Updates to this Guide
While every effort is made by our authors to ensure the accuracy of guidebooks as they go to print, changes can occur during the lifetime of an edition. Any updates that we know of for this guide will be on the Cicerone website (www.cicerone.co.uk/1025/updates), so please check before planning your trip. We also advise that you check information about such things as transport, accommodation and shops locally. Even rights of way can be altered over time. We are always grateful for information about any discrepancies between a guidebook and the facts on the ground, sent by email to [email protected] or by post to Cicerone, Juniper House, Murley Moss, Oxenholme Road, Kendal, LA9 7RL.
Register your book: To sign up to receive free updates, special offers and GPX files where available, register your book at www.cicerone.co.uk.
Front cover: The obligatory photograph at the fingerpost at John o’ Groats
CONTENTS
Map key
Overview map
Route summary table
Suggested schedules
INTRODUCTION
Why the End-to-End route?
Tailoring this route to your needs
Which direction to ride?
Selecting a schedule
When to ride
Riding alone or as part of a group?
Getting there
Getting back
How much to budget
First and last nights
Accommodation
Baggage transfer
What to take
Preparing yourself
Preparing your bike
Eating
Phones and Wi-Fi
Waymarking
Maps
Practical tips
Using this guide
GPX tracks
LAND’S END TO JOHN O’ GROATS
Stage 1 Land’s End to Fowey
Stage 2 Fowey to Crediton
Stage 3 Crediton to Clevedon
Stage 4 Clevedon to Worcester
Stage 5 Worcester to Nantwich
Stage 6 Nantwich to Garstang
Stage 7 Garstang to Penrith
Stage 8 Penrith to Moffat
Stage 9 Moffat to South Queensferry
Stage 10 South Queensferry to Pitlochry
Stage 9a Moffat to Balloch
Stage 10a Balloch to Pitlochry
Stage 11 Pitlochry to Aviemore
Stage 12 Aviemore to Alness
Stage 13 Alness to Tongue
Stage 14 Tongue to John o’ Groats
Appendix A Accommodation
Appendix B Cycle shops
Appendix C Facilities summary
Appendix D Useful resources and contacts
Appendix E Official tourist information contacts
Appendix F Additional contacts for rail travel
Appendix G What to take
Appendix H Further reading
ROUTE SUMMARY TABLE
The winding mechanism of the UK’s largest and oldest working salt mine alongside the Weaver Navigation in Winsford (Stage 6)
INTRODUCTION
Heading towards Lochmaben on the quiet roads of Dumfrieshire (Stage 8)
Cycling the length of Great Britain between the two extremities of Land’s End in the southwest and John o’ Groats in the northeast is a challenge that many cyclists aspire to at least once in their lifetime. There is no official route to follow and what happens in between is entirely up to you. So there is a lot of planning involved.
The journey is commonly referred to as ‘LEJOG’ when ridden south to north, ‘JOGLE’ when ridden in the opposite direction and sometimes just as ‘the End-to-End route’. But no matter what you call it, it is going to be at least 874 miles, which is currently considered to be the minimum distance if you throw caution to the wind and ride beside fast-moving traffic following trunk roads and busy city streets. The safer and more enjoyable option detailed in this guidebook links stretches of traffic-free, shared-use paths with quieter roads without adding much to the distance to give an ‘optimal’ route that can still be comfortably ridden by a reasonably fit cyclist in a fortnight. The ‘optimal’ route is 1000 miles (1600 km) with 14,400m of ascent, the majority encountered at either end of the route. A slightly longer option has alternative stages through Glasgow and the Trossachs is 1046 miles (1675km) with 14,800m of ascent.
Why the End-to-End route?
Land’s End is not the most westerly point on the island of Great Britain; neither is it the most southerly. And when you get to the other end you will see that John o’ Groats is actually about 2 miles (3km) south of the nearby headland of Dunnet Head. So what’s all the excitement about then?
At the lighthouse on Dunnet Head, the most northern point on mainland Britain (Stage 14)
The simple answer is that Land’s End and John o’ Groats are the two populated places on the island of Great Britain separated by the greatest distance. And it’s this that has captured people’s imagination and turned the journey into a challenge. Once you’ve completed it you will never look at a weather map in exactly the same way; mentions of rain across the Highlands will bring the memories of your ride and the friendship of the people you rode with flooding back. Your ride will also form a common bond with every other End-to-Ender you meet for the rest of your life, giving endless topics of conversation about the best route, the hardest day or the best pint you enjoyed along the way. And because you’ve ridden it, you can talk knowledgably.
Tailoring this route to your needs
Every End-to-Ender starts out by developing a plan that works for them in terms of the amount of time they can spare; their budget and the places they want to visit along the way. This guidebook takes you through those considerations and gives you the tools and information to develop your own itinerary and schedule.
The route described in this guidebook sticks to traffic-free paths and minor roads. This makes navigation more complex so turn-by-turn instructions and detailed maps are included in the route description. Using the GPX tracks for the LEJOG route that is described here and the corresponding JOGLE route, which are available to download for free at www.cicerone.co.uk/1025/GPX, will undoubtedly make navigation easier.
However, many will want to tailor the route to their own needs. For instance, you may wish to make a detour to visit a landmark, friends or family or incorporate an iconic climb. You can easily do this by uploading the GPX files into one of the route planning apps listed in Appendix D, most of which can be used without a subscription, and incorporate your detour safe in the knowledge that most apps automatically pick a route that sticks to cycle paths and quieter roads. Now it’s your End-to-End route; your challenge.
A journey through a myriad of landscapes
Great Britain is renowned for its geological diversity with rocks of almost all geological ages appearing as outcrops. This route crosses the bands of different types of rock which typically run in a north-easterly direction. As a result you cycle over a rich variety of terrain. Sometimes it’s flat making progress rapid, but in other places it’s hillier and more challenging and it’s all due to the underlying geology.
In southwest England, Devonian and Carboniferous slates, shales, sandstones and limestone are common, giving rolling hills, diverse coastal scenery and bleak moors wherever harder granites come to the surface. Once past Taunton, the Somerset Levels are a lowland landscape typically just 20–30 feet above sea level. They were formed during the last 10,000 years after the last ice age and until they were drained in the 16th and 17th centuries would have flooded regularly. Here sedimentary clays overlay older Triassic rock with numerous outcrops, typically formed from sandstone and shales that were once islands standing out above the wetlands. Look out for Burrow Mump, which is 4 miles (6km) to the east of the route south of Bridgwater and the more prominent Glastonbury Tor, which is 10 miles (16km) to the east of the route.
The route skirts around the western end of the Mendips Hills, a ridge of largely Carboniferous limestone that hides Cheddar Gorge then heads north across the flatlands along the Bristol Channel. These were formed from alluvial deposits and are riven by small rivers that were once tidal for some way inland but are now controlled by sluices or ‘clysts’ as they are called locally.
The wide fertile Severn Vale runs northwards through Gloucestershire and Worcestershire with the higher ground of Cotwolds Hills to the east and the Forest of Dean and the Mendip Hills to the west. Being formed from sedimentary sandstones topped with alluvial clays means it is mostly flat, giving miles of easy pedalling. However, deposits of tills and gravels left by retreating glaciers do give the occasional low hill such as Woolridge to north of Gloucester. At Kidderminster, the route leaves the River Severn and follows its tributary the River Stour which eventually turns east into the West Midlands. Here the sedimentary shales, sandstones and mudstones contain coal measures that were once mined in the Shropshire Coalfields to the west and the South Staffordshire Coalfields to the east.
The route slips through a green corridor between these urban areas and then crosses a wide basin of red sandstones that runs through the eastern part of Shropshire and north across Cheshire. There are occasional geological faults which show as escarpments and low hills, such as the Mid Cheshire Range to the west. Repeated flooding 250–300 million years ago left massive salt beds mainly in the area around Northwich. The Romans extracted salt here during their occupation, but commercial extraction began in the 17th century and continues today at a mine next to the route in Winsford. The route also passes a number of pools or meres formed when worked-out mines subsided.
Sedimentary rocks such as sandstones, siltstones and mudstones also predominate through Lancashire coastal plain. Here they are shot through with coal measures in the southern industrial belt, millstone grit in the upland areas of the Forest of Bowland and the higher moors the east of Chorley and a belt of limestone between Lancaster and Sedbergh where the route follows quiet roads up the Lune Valley.
Immediately after Sedbergh the route runs around the western perimeter of the Howgill Fells which are mainly formed out of Silurian slates and gritstones, still following the River Lune and briefly snaking below the busy M6 before heading west to Shap where quarrying for limestone and blue and pink granites is the mainstay of the local economy. Once on the descent into Penrith, it is back to sedimentary rocks such as sandstones, siltstones and mudstones through the easy-rolling Eden Valley, across the Scottish border and westwards along the Solway Firth to Annan.
From a geographical and geological perspectives Scotland divides into four main subcategories. The sparsely populated Southern Uplands are mainly