I am sitting here less than a week after completing my walk, its demands still apparent to my body and the rose tinted spectacles yet to make an appearance, and I am reflecting on a challenging eleven days. Early on in that time I was reading the foreword to my guidebook and noted the following comment about the Offa's Dyke trail: 'One of Britain's classic trails, this ancient route is long but not particularly strenuous, making it an ideal challenge for first-time backpackers'. I think it must be the foreword for a different book.
I would not suggest I am the world's most experienced trail walker but I do have some experience and I can say from my point of view Offa's Dyke is hard. I accept us walkers can all too easily compare a trail with the Holy Trinity of walking - a route that is flat, smooth and soft underfoot - thereby making any route a tough one. But this is tough by any standard.
In part this is because there is a lot of climbing and descending throughout the day and every day. The daily overall climb may not amount to that of an average UK mountain but the repeated ascent and descent is wearing and the daily distances are long given the terrain. Of all the walkers I met not one said anything other than how tough they were finding the route yet they were all seasoned walkers, most of whom were walking from bed and breakfast to bed and breakfast while having the bulk of their equipment couriered from place to place by one of the package transport companies that are springing up more and more on longer trails.
It is even more of a challenge if, like me, you are wild camping any part of the route: you have to carry all your food and water - especially water - to cover up to two days. The lack of services along the route precludes 'topping up' as you walk and the lack of water sources meant using a water filter proved unviable. In hindsight, to do this route 'self supported' I should have made two changes: carry less weight and take more time. I may have successfully completed the route but it was at times punishing.
I can not help but compare this long walk with those I made across Spain. Even my 800 miles south-north route completed two years ago seemed an easier walk than this 180 miles along Offa's Dyke. The reasons the Spain trip seemed easier are the same as those that make Offa's Dyke hard: the daily distances may be similar but the terrain is largely far less challenging; and throughout each day you invariably find a village or two on the route where you can obtain food and drink or simply take a break in comfort.
Those long Spanish walks are not just physically less challenging, their remoteness and length helps create a headspace that leads to a detachment from the pressures and pace of the real world. Offa's Dyke was different, despite its remoteness and length, its demands held your focus each day: in Spain a detachment comes about because you begin to walk without thinking whereas in Wales you remain anchored in the world as you are always thinking about walking.
My time walking the Welsh border may not have been easy and neither had it given me - other than at moments - that sense of mental tranquility that I have experienced in Spain. But testing the limits of my physical capacity has given me a sense of achievement and a sense of where my boundaries lie. It has also provided some useful thoughts for my planned walk of the South West Coastal Path, over three times the length of Offa's Dyke and like Offa's Dyke a highly undulating route. My recent experience means at the moment I am now looking forward to that walk with a little trepidation but with luck, by the time I start, I will be looking back at this one through those rose tinted spectacles.




























